Click the link to read the story, Mangos and Matthew 25 in Madagascar.
The Turks periodically visit the U.S. and are able to visit congregations as their schedule allows. Email them to extend an invitation to visit your congregation or organization.
About Dan and Elizabeth Turk’s ministry
“We are excited about working with the Church of Jesus Christ in Madagascar (FJKM) in its ministries of healing and hope,” write Dan and Elizabeth Turk.
The Turks serve with the PC(USA)’s partner church, FJKM, as it ministers to the population in the areas of health, environment, agriculture, and safe drinking water. FJKM believes that Christian witness should include ministry both to the physical and spiritual needs of God’s people and care for all of God’s creation. Dan and Elizabeth work as advisors to FJKM in the fields of environment and health, respectively.
Dan works with the FJKM’s Fruits, Vegetables, and Environmental Education (FVEE) program. With a per capita income of less than $250 per year, many Malagasy people have difficulty feeding their families. Due to ongoing deforestation, many of Madagascar’s endemic plants and animals are threatened with extinction. FJKM is responding to these needs by helping people grow fruits and vegetables to improve their nutrition and get out of poverty. The FVEE promotes environmental awareness by planting native trees at FJKM churches, seminaries, and schools. Dan helps pastoral students learn to grow fruits and vegetables. The new pastors use these skills to help their communities and families achieve improved food security and nutrition. The FVEE has established a fruit center to help promote fruit growing on a national scale, focusing on many of the world’s best varieties of grafted mangos.
Elizabeth’s main focus with the FJKM is in the area of community health and HIV/AIDS, especially in training, program design and implementation. The FJKM’s health professionals at rural dispensaries work to prevent and treat the major illnesses that threaten health: malaria, measles, diarrhea, and pneumonia. The dispensaries also provide access to important services like family planning. When funds permit, Elizabeth assists the FJKM’s efforts to help communities gain access to safe drinking water. Elizabeth also serves on the FJKM National AIDS Committee. FJKM trains pastoral students in AIDS prevention and has a youth peer education program designed to help youth live positively according to biblical principles. In 2020, the FJKM began addressing the COVID-19 epidemic as well.
Country context
Madagascar remains one of the world’s poorest countries. Eighty-five percent of the population lives on less than $2 per day. Located in the Indian Ocean, 250 miles off the southeastern coast of Africa, Madagascar is the world’s fourth-largest island and home to many unique species of mammals, birds, and plants. The Malagasy people are descendants of Africans and Indonesians who settled on the island about 2,000 years ago. Madagascar suffered a period of crisis following a coup d’état in 2009. The current president was elected in 2018, and the next presidential election is scheduled for 2023. The majority of Malagasy citizens are Christian, a large percentage adheres to traditional beliefs and less than 10 percent are Muslim.
About Dan and Elizabeth Turk
Born in Atlanta, Georgia, Dan graduated from Davidson College in North Carolina with a Bachelor of Science degree in Biology. He earned a Master of Science in Agronomy and Soil science from the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa and a Ph.D. in forestry from North Carolina State University. His doctoral research focused on the growth rates of more than 60 native Malagasy trees. Dan spent two years as a consultant in agroforestry to the Ranomafana National Park project in Madagascar. He is the author of “A Guide to Trees of Ranomafana National Park.”
Starting out in Anniston, Alabama, Elizabeth graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Psychology from Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. She later earned a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from Indiana Wesleyan University in Marion and a Master’s degree in Public Health from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Elizabeth served as a Presbyterian volunteer in Haiti, Zaire, and Madagascar. Before going to Madagascar, she was a health education intern at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta and worked as a pediatric nurse in Orlando, Florida.
Dan and Elizabeth are members of Decatur Presbyterian Church in Georgia and West Raleigh Presbyterian Church in North Carolina. They have a son, Robert, and a daughter, Frances.
Birthdays:
Dan – February 14
Elizabeth – May 24
Robert – February 7
Frances – January 9