The generational impact of philanthropy at the Temerty Faculty of Medicine

For Michael Zarathus-Cook, a first-year student in the Temerty Faculty of Medicine’s MD Program, the University of Toronto’s annual Giving Day was an opportunity to celebrate our community’s continued generosity and the impact donor support has in advancing inclusive health, education, research and patient care.
While Michael holds both a Master of Health Science in medical physiology and an Honours Bachelor of Science in health & disease from U of T, his journey to becoming a member of Temerty Medicine’s MD Class of 2028 demanded an uncommon level of perseverance – Michael was living in a homeless shelter at the start of his undergraduate degree.
Michael credits much of where he is today to U of T’s faculty members and leaders who took the time to listen to his story, as well as to the donor-supported scholarships, bursaries and awards that have played a critical role in lowering the barriers he faced.
Emma Jones spoke more with Michael about his unique journey into medical school and why he was proud to serve as Temerty Medicine’s 2025 Giving Day student ambassador.
Can you describe your journey at U of T?
I initially started as a philosophy student at University of Toronto Scarborough. I had a lot of stress that year – my living situation was precarious, and I was working to find ways to support myself while also being a student. I ended up taking some time off school to work in the arts and when I came back, I re-enrolled as a human biology student at UTSC. It was several hours of commuting every day, and I felt I would be better able to pursue my goals on St. George campus.
I submitted an application to transfer but was denied several times for various procedural reasons. This was during the pandemic, so everything felt inaccessible and very stressful. One evening, after my third rejected application, I called the offices of all seven deans at the Faculty of Arts and Science to leave a voicemail requesting help to get the transfer approved. It was late in the evening and I didn’t expect anyone to pick up, but the administrative assistant at the Innis College office did. I explained what I was going through and she eventually gave me the home phone number of Dean Steve Masse.
Again to my surprise, Dean Masse answered the late call and listened while I went through my experiences in my first year, why I decided to come back to school, my goals of getting into Temerty Medicine, and why I felt I needed to be closer to home to make all this work. After rallying a bit more support across a few more colleges, I was eventually able to transfer to the St. George campus, which made it way more feasible for me to work and study and support my family. So it was extra special when, a couple years after this ordeal, I got an email to notify me that I’d be graduating as a Dean’s List scholar.
We need empathic institutions as a society – these bigger organizations that can really move mountains. U of T has that great duality of being a large institution, but it also has enough support and resources to give students the time to be humans and to be treated as a human.