Event Details
Wednesday, November 5, 2025
Cocktails at 5:45 PM I Program & Dinner at 7:00 PM
The Weitzman National Museum
101 S. Independence Mall East, Philadelphia, PA
Cocktail attire & Dietary laws observed
Honoring
Ambassador Amy Gutmann
Christopher H. Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science in the School of Arts and Sciences and Professor of Communication in the Annenberg School for Communication
U.S. Ambassador to Germany (2022-2024)
President Emerita, University of Pennsylvania (2004-2022)
About Ambassador Amy Gutmann
The Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History is proud to honor Dr. Amy Gutmann with the 2025 Only in America® Award. Amy Gutmann’s life embodies a quintessential Only in America® story. Her father escaped Nazi persecution in the 1940s, and she later became the first in her family to graduate college, and rose to the highest levels in academic leadership and diplomacy, making indelible contributions to our society. She has been an outspoken advocate for Israel, and steadfast in her forceful opposition to antisemitism, hate, and discrimination in all its forms. Gutmann’s journey mirrors many of the “Dream. Dare. Do.” stories featured in The Weitzman's galleries.
Gala Leadership (In Formation)
Honorary Chairs
Jane and Stuart Weitzman
Chairs
David L. Cohen, U.S. Ambassador to Canada (ret.)
Betsy and Philip Darivoff
John A. Fry
Sharon and Joseph Kestenbaum
Andrea Mitchell
Julie and Marc E. Platt
Lyn M. Ross
Garrett Snider
Lindy Snider
Joseph Zuritsky
Co-Chairs
Dan Hilferty
Penn Medicine
Sherrie Savett
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Please click on the RSVP to make your donation. If you prefer to make your donation another way, please contact Rachel Berger at rberger@theweitzman.org or call 215-391-4632 with any questions.
Ambassador Amy Gutmann Full Bio
The Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History is proud to honor Dr. Amy Gutmann with the 2025 Only in America® Award. Amy Gutmann’s life embodies a quintessential Only in America® story. Her father escaped Nazi persecution in the 1940s, and she later became the first in her family to graduate college, and rose to the highest levels in academic leadership and diplomacy, making indelible contributions to our society. She has been an outspoken advocate for Israel, and steadfast in her forceful opposition to antisemitism, hate, and discrimination in all its forms. Gutmann’s journey mirrors many of the “Dream. Dare. Do.” stories featured in The Weitzman's galleries.
Amy Gutmann is a prize-winning scholar who has published and lectured widely on democracy and education; deliberation, compromise, diplomacy, and their critics; bioethics and access to health care; human rights; identity politics; and ethics in public affairs. She was a transformative president of the University of Pennsylvania for 18 years, and she currently serves as the Christopher H. Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science, in the School of Arts and Sciences and Professor of Communication, Annenberg School for Communication.
Prior to returning to Penn in 2024, Gutmann served as U.S. Ambassador to Germany (2022-24). During her tenure, the German relationship with the U.S. became stronger than ever in the post-WWII period, on multiple measures including support for Ukraine’s defense against Putin, increased trade and investment, and resistance to rising extremism. As U.S. Ambassador, she launched U.S. Mission Germany’s “Stand Up, Speak Out” campaign, partnering with organizations across civil society in support of democracy and against all forms of hate.
Gutmann was the eighth and longest serving president of Penn, serving from 2004 to 2022. Named by Fortune in 2018 as one of the “World’s 50 Greatest Leaders,” Gutmann is renowned for championing affordable access to education and health care, innovative discoveries that save lives and propel economies forward, global engagement, and public-private partnerships.
First in her family to graduate college, Gutmann made affordable educational access a top priority, more than doubling the number of students from low-income and first-generation college families. Gutmann led the city’s most powerful economic growth engine and its preeminent academic health care system, Penn Medicine. Gutmann created a robust innovation ecosystem with Pennovation Works and the Pennovation Center business incubator and laboratory.
Global engagement was also a centerpiece of Gutmann’s presidency, which included the creation of Perry World House on campus and the Penn Biden Center for Diplomacy and Global Engagement in Washington, D.C.
Gutmann raised over $10 billion for Penn and Penn’s endowment quintupled from $4 to $20 billion. These resources underwrote massive expansions of student financial aid, innovative collaborative research, and patient-centered clinical care—in addition to the single largest private contribution to the city’s public schools.
Appointed in 2009 by President Barack Obama, Gutmann chaired the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues for seven years, publishing 10 reports on major issues including preventing and responding to public health crises. Gutmann also is an award-winning author and editor of 17 books, including Democratic Education, The Spirit of Compromise (Princeton University Press, 2012) and Everybody Wants to Go to Heaven but Nobody Wants to Die: Bioethics and the Transformation of Health Care in America (Liveright, 2019) with an Afterword on Pandemic Ethics for the paperback edition.
Gutmann currently serves on the Board of Trustees of the American Academy in Berlin. Previously, Gutmann served on the Board of Vanguard (2006-2022) and the Berggruen Institute (2014-2021). She served as Chair of the Association of American Universities (2014-2015); Executive Committee member of the National Constitution Center [2007-2019] and Chair of its Liberty Medal Committee; and member of the Knight Commission on Trust, Media, and Democracy (2017-2019).
Gutmann received many honors for her academic achievement and her leadership. Among them, she was honored in 2019 with both the William Penn Award and the Pennsylvania Society’s Gold Medal for Distinguished Achievement. She holds honorary degrees from Columbia, Johns Hopkins, Kalamazoo, Penn, Princeton, Rochester, and Wesleyan. As U.S. Ambassador to Germany, she was honored with the 2023 Leo Baeck Medal, the Institute’s highest honor to preserve the spirit of German Jewry in the realms of culture, academia, politics and philanthropy. In 2025, she was honored by the Mensch International Foundation with a Mensch Award for her leadership and service.
Before Gutmann’s appointment at Penn, she was Provost and Laurance S. Rockefeller University Professor [now emerita] at Princeton University, founding director of the University Center for Human Values, and recipient of the President’s Teaching Award.