Documents
in Quebec History
Last
revised: 23 August 2000 | French Canadians and Jews
The
Hospital Strike Editorial,
Montreal Gazette, Monday, June 18, 1934 The
authorities of Notre Dame Hospital took the only proper course open to them in
dismissing the thirty-one internes who went on strike. Right-thinking people will
have no hesitation in approving the action taken. The young medicos who attempted
to force the hospital into breaking its contract with an interne of another race
may have believed in the justice of their demand, though others will not; but
whether the demand was warranted or not, the method of enforcing it was unquestionably
wrong. Still less excuse is there for the men who have left their posts in other
hospitals as a demonstration of sympathy and support. There are certain services
which impose special obligations upon those engaged in them, services in which
loyalty and dependability are paramount considerations. The soldier must not desert
his post, and, if he does the penalties are very severe. The policeman and the
fireman have special responsibilities toward the communities which employ them;
it is their business to safeguard the lives and properties of citizens, and a
strike in either of these two essential services is never justified, never tolerated
by public opinion. The obligations which rests upon those engaged in the care
and treatment of hospital patients is, if anything, more binding, and in no circumstances
is its repudiation excusable. Yet in the case of Notre Dame Hospital almost the
entire staff of internes deserted their posts, completely disregarding the welfare
of the sufferers dependent upon them. But for the prompt action of the hospital
authorities and the quick co-operation of the medical profession, the lives of
some patients might easily have been jeopardized; the internes "refused to
assist the surgeons in emergency operations". Dismissal of the deserters
was eminently right. But the situation has been rendered much more serious by
the extension of the strike to other hospitals, materially impairing the ability
of these institutions to care for their patients, however desperate the need may
be. The example set by the Notre Dame management is the right one and if the other
hospitals can follow it without endangering the lives of the sufferers in their
care, they should do so. The strike has occurred in an effort to satisfy an unworthy
prejudice rather than vindicate a principle, and the situation calls for resolute
action by all the hospitals concerned, preferably on the lines pursued at Notre
Dame. These institutions are well rid of young men whose conception of their professional
duty is so imperfect. It is probable that every one of the internes concerned
in this unfortunate incident will live to regret his ill-conceived action. These
young men are upon the threshold of their careers in a very honorable profession,
and they have begun badly. ©
1999 Claude Bélanger, Marianopolis College |