Sustainable Development Goals

Intentional Living

Jill (Owen), ’82, and David Engelstad, ’90, bring physical therapy and engineering expertise to American Samoa.

On the walls of David and Jill Engelstad’s home in American Samoa hang many reflections of the United Nation’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals, a global call to action for the improvement of humankind and planet Earth. For David, ’90, and Jill (Owen), ’82, the pictures and artifacts serve as a guide to intentional living.

The Engelstads met after graduating from UND. While their educations differed – David studied civil engineering and Jill physical therapy – their hearts for working with underserved populations aligned. David started his career with the federal Indian Health Service, improving water and sanitation structures on Arizona’s Navajo Nation. Jill traveled with him, providing physical therapy and preoperative care for Native patients.

jill and david in american samoa

The United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals have motivated the Engelstads’ living and giving practices.

“We’re so lucky to have that experience. That’s when we became quite the team,” said Jill.

David’s career as a Commissioned Corps Engineer with the Public Health Service took the couple to a new home nearly every five years. Jill took on a new physical therapy job at each site, earned her master’s degree in global affairs, and traveled internationally on medical mission trips. Their exposure to inequalities broadened with every relocation.

“Professionally, with every decade of life, we’re having more of these experiences that really show the economic imbalances of life and populations. We came to a point of questioning, ‘What do we do with this?’” said David.

Their solution was to travel further into the heart of the issue in American Samoa, a U.S. Territory that is made up of five main islands in the South Pacific. In 2019, David accepted a job providing in-house capacity building with the American Samoa Environmental Protection Agency. He is one of the only engineers in American Samoa. Jill’s broad physical therapy clinical experience made her the perfect candidate to build a rehabilitation program for the first-ever total knee replacement surgeries completed in the South Pacific. Under her leadership, the island’s only hospital, Lyndon B. Johnson Tropical Medical Center, now offers specialized physical therapy treatment – a significant milestone for the hospital and its patients.

For David and Jill, both in their early 60s, uprooting overseas was just another step in their adventurous life journey of service. The Engelstads opted out of government housing and live in a village on Tutuila, the main island of American Samoa. Exploring the tropical paradise has been a favorite pastime along with learning the Samoan language and culture, building relationships with locals, and helping neighbors.

jill and children

Children from the Engelstads' Tutuila neighborhood surprise Jill with locally made birthday gifts.

For David and Jill, both in their early 60s, uprooting overseas was just another step in their adventurous life journey of service. The Engelstads opted out of government housing and live in a village on Tutuila, the main island of American Samoa. Exploring the tropical paradise has been a favorite pastime along with learning the Samoan language and culture, building relationships with locals, and helping neighbors.

"We are a little out of the ordinary in some ways,” Jill admits. “You have to have an understanding of development in a second-world territory like this in order to make a difference. The locals are scratching their heads because we’re not like the other two-year contract people that come down here and are gone. We’re invested and we ‘get it.’ I think that’s the secret sauce that makes us incredibly effective.”

We are a little out of the ordinary in some ways. You have to have an understanding of development in a second-world territory like this in order to make a difference.Jill Engelstad, ’82

Sustainable Development Goal #4 – Quality Education – is what motivates their giving to UND. The Engelstads have learned firsthand the value of education and hope to make a difference by supporting first-generation college students and women studying engineering.

“The opportunity of education has opened up the world for us,” said David. “We’re grateful for that gift we’ve been given, and whatever we can do to support it with our means, we do.”

While they embark on their second year in American Samoa and David approaches mandatory active-duty retirement, the couple is not planning on slowing down; rather, their eyes are set on their next service destination: Africa.

“We feel like, in a way, we’re just beginning another exciting chapter,” said David.lding relationships with locals, and helping neighbors.