Growing up in apartheid South Africa, inequality was always front of mind for Tughfa Hamdulay. She’s been in the social welfare sector for 31 years, lives and breathes her ideals, and is the director of early childhood development and partial care at the Western Cape department of social development.
Hamdulay believes that focusing on ECD is the best investment the government can make: it’s an opportunity to make a difference in the trajectory of a child’s life, which also changes the lives of families and communities.
She says: “When you choose to be a civil servant, you choose to engage in a relationship with the public and to be of service, regardless of the personal cost we sometimes pay. There have been times, as is the experience of many social workers and others in this department, when you put in extra hours, miss family time, and take emotional and physical strain. But when keeping sight of the ultimate objective — which is doing what’s best for the people we serve — we realise we are in fact duty-bound to do so. It’s the outcome that is important, and what one strives for.”
“When you choose to be a civil servant, you choose to engage in a relationship with the public and to be of service, regardless of the personal cost we sometimes pay. There have been times, as is the experience of many social workers and others in this department, when you put in extra hours, miss family time, and take emotional and physical strain. But when keeping sight of the ultimate objective — which is doing what’s best for the people we serve — we realise we are in fact duty-bound to do so. It’s the outcome that is important, and what one strives for.”