Rabinovitch's appointment was immediately met with backlash. Members of the public in Quebec sent letters to the hospital claiming that
Catholics were being
replaced by Jews, that the French Canadian population had been abused under the banner of tolerance, and declaring that they had a right to refuse to be treated by openly Jewish doctors. In early June 1934 a petition signed by doctors and interns of Notre-Dame was submitted to the hospitals board, requesting that the contract between the Hospital and Rabinovitch be rescinded. After a lengthy deliberation by the hospital board it was decided to uphold the contract and hire Rabinovitch. At midnight on 14 June 1934, thirty-two
resident doctors at the hospital walked off the job rather than work with Rabinovich, refusing even to treat patients in critical condition. By 17 June the strike had expanded to include interns from five other Montreal hospitals, with interns at a further three hospitals signing a petition in support of the strike, and with several hundred
nurses threatening to join the strike.
Quebec nationalist groups and media such as the
Saint-Jean-Baptiste Society and
Le Devoir quickly backed the striking interns, with the latter publishing
stories referring to Rabinovich as "the foreign physician" and alleging that he had links to "
high finance." On 18 June, after efforts from
Montreal's Jewish community to solve the situation came short, Rabinovitch formally resigned from his position. His letter of resignation, which was published publicly in several newspapers, stated that he "bemoaned the fact that so many French Canadian physicians, namely graduates, should have ignored the first duty of their oath," but that the "distressing, serious and dangerous condition to which the patients of the Nôtre-Dame and other hospitals have been exposed" left him with no choice. Following Rabinovitch's resignation, the striking doctors returned to work at 7:30 PM on 19 June 1934. None of them would face any disciplinary sanctions for their actions. On 22 June 1934, an interview with three of the strikers was published in
L’Ordre in which the strikers denied being motivated by antisemitism, stating instead that they had legitimate concerns about competition between Jewish and Catholic doctors for limited internships, and about Catholic interns being forced to spend an entire year practicing alongside a Jew. == Aftermath ==