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Tyehimba Turner 鈥16 was part of the first cohort of Peace Corps volunteers allowed into Liberia to restore education systems in the wake of two civil wars and an Ebola crisis. Tyehimba embodies the legacy of our founder Father Samuel Mazzuchelli, and has 鈥渟et out to where the work is great and difficult.鈥澛

This article appeared in The Magazine of 糖心官网 (April 2020)



Bringing a 糖心官网 Worldview to Universal Challenges

糖心官网 alumnae/i are extending the values they learned as undergraduates to a global stage.



Tyehimba Turner 鈥16 serves as community engagement manager for UNICEF USA, working with the city of Chicago and community organizations to establish child-friendly policies that address systemic gaps in social service. His career, thus far, has focused on righting many of the wrongs he sees in the world鈥攐verseas and here at home. 



Turner was an honors program student mentored by Margaret Jonah, professor emerita of biology. 鈥淪he鈥檚 the smartest scientist I鈥檝e ever met,鈥 he says. 鈥淪he showed me that science at its core is asking a question and then finding the methods to address it.鈥 



He credits his political science professor, David Dolence, and former Lund-Gill Chair Christopher Kennedy for teaching him how to analyze a range of issues, including education and health care, from a U.S. policy perspective. 



Four years ago, Turner was teaching ninth and tenth grade science as a Peace Corps volunteer in Liberia. He was part of the first cohort of Peace Corps volunteers allowed into the country to restore education systems in the wake of two civil wars and an Ebola crisis. 



Public health, one of the world鈥檚 most challenging policy areas, was an important focus of Turner鈥檚 work. He educated community members about the danger of malaria and transported sick individuals to medical services. 



鈥淢any Liberians had come to distrust the health system during the Ebola outbreak,鈥 he explains. 鈥淭hey associated government hospitals with death; that鈥檚 where their sick relatives went and died.鈥 



Turner encouraged the children he taught-and their parents-to seek treatment for their health concerns and set up an informal pipeline to a hospital where a Peace Corps doctor was posted. When a pregnant neighbor became seriously ill with suspected malaria, Turner urged her to go to the hospital, but she refused. 



鈥淲hen I checked on her later that night her fever had reached 104 degrees,鈥 Turner says. 鈥淚 refused to leave unless she came with me to the hospital. When we arrived there, she was diagnosed with complex malaria. She went on to make a full recovery and give birth to a healthy child. I鈥檓 proud of that moment. It鈥檚 very likely she would have died if she had not been treated that night.鈥 



Prior to his work with the Peace Corps, Turner served with AmeriCorps Vista, where he recruited and trained volunteers for service in shelters across the city of Chicago. 



Today, Turner deftly blends all these experiences in his work for UNICEF. He is researching Chicago鈥檚 policy banning child labor in its garment supply chain and working with the city to strengthen the policy鈥檚 language. He sees this as a major step toward reducing child labor and trafficking, an issue he discussed as the kickoff speaker for last year鈥檚 Fair Trade Campaign national conference in Chicago.