Mr Hoyte was an embodiment of duty to his country and people
By Faith A. Harding Ed.D
Stabroek News
December 30, 2002
Mr. Hugh Desmond Hoyte was one of the most spotless and dignified characters of Guyana and when the history of this country is written he should be cherished as one of the purest patriots of the nation.
The defining characterization of his life was an embodiment of love and duty to his country and people. With him, it was always honour and duty to nation before self. I searched deep into his personality because I could not understand how anyone could be so selfless and yet so pure. As I searched I found someone who operated at an extraordinary high level of consciousness. I believe that it is the gravity and nobility of his character, level of consciousness and his mental vigour that commended him to his colleagues and which made him the preferred one for responsibility and command of the nation to be entrusted to his hands.
What I admired most about him was his will power and passionate admiration for young people with new creative ideas. He never tired of listening to us younger ones articulating our dreams and ideas, some so utopist yet welcomed by him.
Shortly after I had remigrated from the USA, I heard that Vice President Desmond Hoyte was seeking young persons with doctorate degrees for a United Nations funded project. I was bold enough to call the Vice-President directly and to my surprise he accepted my call and an appointment was made for our discussion.
When I met him, Vice President Hoyte just seemed to stand taller than anyone else in the society with a quiet, gentle firmness unseen. He was most engaging as he sought to elicit my ideals and values for Guyana and define the project to me.
My overall impressions were of a man dedicated to the tasks of nation building, a man who cared for the social conditions of the people of his country. He gave me the distinct feeling that he was a constructive statesman.
Although the project was not fully funded, I was still fortunate to work at an agency that fell within the cluster of Vice President Hoyte's responsibility, the State Planning Secretariat. While I was head of the department of Social Infrastructure at the State Planning Secretariat, he consistently sought my views during the formulation of the principles of the national budget annually.
He seemed to be always looking for a new conceptual reality - one that would forge growth on the economic and social fronts. He desired economic progress and all the social improvements to which a nation had a right to aspire, and to this his search in the younger generation seemed to be focused. He appeared motivated by young thinkers, always in the quest for new ideas.
In establishing the Public Service of his administration when he became President, Mr. Hoyte's mandate to me, on appointment as Minister, was to reform the public service. He expressed a determined will that under his stewardship, disorder, laziness, ostentation, incompetence and corruption had no place. In our discussions he stressed an insatiable desire to bring about an efficient and effective public service that represented a free and open government that ensured the well being of the nation. It was this vision of a public service of good governance that led to his piloting of a new era of leaders and leadership by example.
I found it extremely inspiring to work under the leadership of Mr. Hoyte. His mind was the repository of a vast fund of valuable learning, quotable quotes and humourous anecdotes. Even more than that, he had this liberating influence that made me comfortable expressing my views on national and political issues freely.
His encouragement of free expression was a part of his economic concept of the free market. As he saw free markets as the great engines of economic development so he saw the freedom of expression as the engine of social growth and development. These 'freedoms', so to speak, bring about a source of economic and social wealth, and the hope of a nation grasping at the opportunity to realize its much-touted potential. Mr. Hoyte was a Renaissance. I will miss him dearly.