Stabroek News Sunday

Profession­al social worker Debbie Joseph-Hopkinson embodies resilience

- By Miranda La Rose

Debbie Joseph-Hopkinson, 53, interim director of the Institute for Human Resilience, Strategic Security and the Future, University of Guyana and president of the Guyana Associatio­n of Profession­al Social Workers (GAPSW) has slowly but surely climbed the academic and profession­al ladders by following due process.

Having spent a greater part of her adult life at Love and Faith World Outreach Ministry with Apostle Claude Brooks and his wife Carol Brooks, she said in a recent interview with Stabroek Weekend, “One day, Apostle Brooks drew a step in the ground and said, ‘Debbie you cannot go from the bottom step straight to the top. You have to climb the steps one at a time.’ That stuck in my mind and I acted on it.”

She has pursued several certificat­e and profession­al courses including two diplomas and a bachelor’s degree at the University of Guyana (UG), a master’s degree at the University of the West Indies (UWI) and has her eyes on a doctorate in philosophy.

From St Gabriel’s Primary, she went to Richard Ishmael Secondary, Government Technical Institute (GTI) (1989), a supervisor­y training certificat­e course at Critchlow Labour College (1991), Introducti­on to Social Work I and II at the Institute of Distance and Continuing Education (2004), UG before pursuing a diploma and a bachelor’s degree in social work and a diploma in education (social studies) at UG, and a master’s degree in social work at UWI.

Joseph-Hopkinson is now seconded to the recentlyes­tablished Institute for Human Resilience, Strategic and Security in the Future, UG as the interim director. Under her leadership, for the first time in its 60-year history, 17 students obtained master of science degrees in strategic developmen­t studies.

“From the master of science in strategic developmen­t studies we’re now offering three other programmes including informatio­n gathering and intelligen­ce analysis. Very soon we’re going to launch a master of science in national security studies. We also have courses in trauma and grief resilience, resilience in gender-based violence, migration and human resilience, migration and law, and cognitive behavioura­l theory,” Joseph-Hopkinson said.

A social worker by profession, in 2020 when Covid-19 was wreaking havoc and taking lives, Joseph-Hopkinson along with co-worker Leon Kendall, managed the UG Cares Initiative.

“We ensured the hotlines were kept alive and we kept in touch with the elderly population and the shut-ins who formed part of UG pensioners programme and we did a lot of interventi­ons with families. We were part of the planning for webinars and online meetings using Zoom to inform people about the pandemic, provide self-care tips, communicat­e with them so they remain grateful for life and not go into a state of depression,” she added.

GAPSW

Joseph-Hopkinson joined GAPSW in 2006 and was elected president in 2021.

“Soon we will be officially registerin­g social workers because the Ministry of Human Services and Social Security is moving towards licensing them. To this end the associatio­n has begun to build a database. For licensure social workers will have to register with the GAPSW and have the associatio­n refer or recommend them,” she said.

Apart from licensure, the GAPSW works on a number of social issues. Joseph-Hopkinson said, “We collaborat­ed with the Dorcas Group on the Mahdia Secondary School’s girls’ dorm fire. We also do a lot of work with vulnerable families and communitie­s.”

When she joined GAPSW, she said, “Just about seven or nine persons showed up to meetings. It was functionin­g but it was not visible enough. We now get about 30 or more people attending and the meetings are more participat­ory. We want to keep that momentum going. We are about to launch a public relations programme to make people aware of what we are about.”

She added, “Everything depends on leadership. Under my leadership I’m hoping we can train the younger ones to begin to take over. I believe we must lead in such a way that those we lead must transition into position to excel and to lead even better than those who led them previously.”

She noted that the social work programme at UG is one of the more popular ones.

The GAPSW office has since moved from Woolford Avenue to Lot 10 D’Urban Street obliquely opposite the Assemblies of God Church.

Background

Joseph-Hopkinson grew up in Georgetown. Her parents were divorced and her mother remarried, she said, and, “I respected my stepfather who I called dad.”

Growing up, she said, “Some days were difficult and we ate salt and butter with rice, and rice with eschallot and pepper but we never went to bed hungry. I looked up to my mother who worked with the Sisters of Mercy. She walked from Forshaw Street, Queenstown to Meadowbroo­k, from Queenstown to Kitty and from Queenstown to Kingston where the Sisters of Mercy had their convents because she couldn’t afford to take a bus. When she returned home she fed us and made sure our uniforms for school the next day were cleaned and ironed. That stuck in my mind that I believe even in the minutest of tasks, I must do it with an attitude of excellence.”

At times when the family was without money, she said, “Mommy would send us to my biological father who worked somewhere on the East Bank Demerara to get money. I walked from Queenstown to his workplace only to hear he wasn’t paid. Those experience­s helped to shape the intrinsic resilience in me and gave me a desire to be productive and to prosper.”

After successful­ly writing the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificat­e exams at 16, Joseph-Hopkinson taught at a primary school for three months. Then for the next two to three years she worked at a travel agency. Her eldest brother, Roy Joseph, who was doing well in his job, encouraged her to upgrade her skills.

At 19 years old, she enrolled at GTI and obtained a diploma in commerce, after which, she secured a job at the now defunct Guyana Airways Corporatio­n (GAC) on Main Street.

“Three months into working there, I was pregnant. A lot of people made fun of me - this lil Christian girl becoming pregnant. Neverthele­ss, I worked at GAC for ten years during which time I strayed a bit from God. I was earning my own money. Because I never had certain things I bought shoes and clothes and started to dress up,” she recalled.

When GAC folded in 1999, she found work as a supervisor for the night shift doing data entry at EISYS.

Shortly after she left EISYS, she accompanie­d a friend and her baby to a paediatric­ian. While at the clinic she helped the receptioni­st to put together the files on that busy day. The paediatric­ian saw her and offered her the work of the receptioni­st/clerk who was leaving that weekend.

“I worked there for a year. While there, [one day] three young girls, 11, nine and seven years old … all tested HIV positive. Their stepfather had interfered with them,” she recalled.

That night she dreamt about doing social work. She got up and started to look up what social work was. She found that the University of Guyana was offering programmes in social work and first enrolled in UG’s Institute of Distance and Continuing Education certificat­e programmes before doing the diploma and bachelor’s degree.

“I started my studies very late because I had to work. I got my son at 19 years old. His father, the head of one of our military organisati­ons, abandoned us,” she recalled.

Without her mother and her entire family circle she could not have made it on her own. “My mom stopped working to look after my son. Because of her I was able

 ?? ?? Debbie Joseph-Hopkinson and her children Tahila (left) and Treiston
Debbie Joseph-Hopkinson and her children Tahila (left) and Treiston
 ?? ?? Debbie Joseph-Hopkinson
Debbie Joseph-Hopkinson

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