Food For The Poor Jamaica, the largest charity organization in the country of Jamaica.

Joined September 2011
1,528 Photos and videos
Our official #HurricaneMelissa donation page has been established. Please click on foodforthepoor.org/helpjamai… to make your DONATIONS for persons who were severely affected. #FoodForThePoor #FoodForThePoorJamaica #Jamaica #BuildBackTheLoveForJamaica
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Food For The Poor Jamaica retweeted
Over 70 Spanish citizens arrived today to build out another field hospital; Falmouth, Trelawny. Doctors, nurses, engineers, etc. A big thank you to the Gov. of Spain and the EU. 🇪🇸 🇯🇲
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#FoodForThePoorJamaica to the rescue! In case you missed it, you can watch our highlight from TVJ News last evening. #BuildBackTheLoveForJamaica #FoodForThePoor #HurricaneMelissa #Jamaica #Charity
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Thank you for making the time and effort to assist us today with preparing care packages for persons in need, Sean Paul. We appreciate you, your wife and your supporters of the #SeanPaulFoundation 🙏🏾 You can donate directly to his page by clicking foodforthepoorja.org/seanpau…
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Guess who visited our offices today with his wife and support team to help prepare care packages for persons in need! None other than Sean Paul! Thank you for your service, Sir. 🙏🏾 #HurricaneMelissa #BuildBackTheLoveForJamaica #FoodForThePoorJamaica #FoodForThePoor #Jamaica
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Yesterday, I visited sections of St. James where road clearing and recovery efforts are underway. I met with Acting Chief Engineering Officer, Yannick Bedford, and his team from the St. James Municipal Corporation, who have been working tirelessly since early morning to restore access to key roadways. Our immediate focus is on reopening main routes, especially those leading to hospitals and critical facilities, while addressing public health and waste management concerns. Municipal teams, supported by the police and other local responders, are fully mobilized. This layered response demonstrates how local authorities form the frontline of recovery, while the national agencies such as the NWA and NSWMA will soon begin large-scale clearing, cleaning, and rehabilitation across the island. The work has started, and it will continue throughout the week as we restore access and normalcy for our citizens.
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Food For The Poor Jamaica retweeted
Belmont to Bluefields seems like a war zone. Local transportation is near impossible, so I have to try to get videos from the different areas, we reached out to PM, JDF to get an aerial tour and JDF on the ground and other emergency services. I've reported over 10 deaths to JDF
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Residents today rushed a woman, identified as Isha Shand, to the Black River Police Station after she collapsed at her home in Arlington, St Elizabeth.
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Darliston Board Scheme. My heart is broken.
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CITIZEN SOLDIERS, JOIN THE CALL OUT!! The Jamaica Defence Force (JDF) is advising all members of the First Class of the Jamaica National Reserve (JNR) to report to their respective duty stations effective 30 October 2025. This mobilization forms part of the JDF’s ongoing
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30 Oct 2025
🚨#Update: All Toll Roads REMAIN FREE OF COST. Unscrupulous persons are attempting to charge at the booths. I have asked the security forces to check this.
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Some parts of Westmoreland now accessible for the first time in 3 days. Resident using a tractor to push open a path. #tvjnews #Westmoreland #Melissa #Jamaica
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Food For The Poor Jamaica retweeted
Josh Morgerman - iCyclone is one of the most experienced hurricane chasers on the planet. As far as I know, he was the closest to the center of the storm. Of the 83 hurricanes he’s intercepted, all over the planet, he says Melissa may be the worst. Read his account…
Man. #Hurricane #MELISSA. Incredible power. Perhaps the mightiest hurricane of the 83 I've witnessed. My location (Crawford, a tiny beach town in St. Elizabeth Parish #Jamaica) took the full force of the inner right eyewall and may have seen the peak winds in this historic, record-smashing hurricane. First pic: as it started to get scary. Bone-rattling gusts were making roofs explode into clouds of lethal confetti. The grand palm tree out front was starting to bend obscenely—in a way I found unnatural. Second pic: after we bolted the door shut because it was getting too dangerous even to watch the storm. (I'd randomly ended up in the hotel's kitchen with a local family.) The hurricane's inner eyewall was a screaming white void. All I could see through the cracks in the shutters was the color white—accompanied by a constant, ear-splitting scream that actually caused pain. (Notice the woman in the pic holding her ears.) The scream occasionally got higher and angrier, and those extra-screechy screams made my eardrums pulse. Meanwhile, water was forcing in through every crack—under the floor and between the window slats. I remember shuddering at the thought of what was happening to the town—what this screaming white void was doing to people, homes, communities. My fears were well-founded. The impact in this part of coastal St. Elizabeth Parish is catastrophic. Wooden structures were completely mowed down and in some cases swept from their foundations. Some concrete structures collapsed. The well-built ones—like my hotel—survived, but even they had major roof, window, and door damage. The landscape has been stripped bare—the trees just sticks. The roads are blocked with rubble and utility poles. Nearby Black River—a unique old historical town right on the water—was smashed beyond recognition: historical sites destroyed, main streets filled with rubble, the town market twisted like a pretzel, even the regional hospital destroyed. It's a good thing I wasn't in my hotel room during the storm because one of the windows blew out, showering the bed with glass and wood. The hotel lost most of its roof, and several third-story rooms were smashed open. But in the lower flooors, those grand old concrete walls protected us. And so far I'm aware of only two deaths in Crawford—a fellow who had a heart attack at the school next door (his body was still in his car and unclaimed the next morning, a sad and disturbing sight), and a woman who drowned in the storm surge in Gallon Beach. While walking down the devastated streets of Black River, I ran into the Jamaican Member of Parliament for this region, @floydgreenja. He's a great dude and I appreciate that he already has a gameplan for turning this catastrophe into an opportunity—to build this region back better. And I vowed on the spot that I'm going to make it my mission to spread awareness of this catastrophe and get that aid flowing in. I'll be talking about MELISSA a lot over the coming months—because it is both a fascinating meteorological event and a human disaster that demands an international response. (And I swear an epic video is coming out of this.)
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Aftermath of Melissa 📍 Einstown (sp?), St. Ann. Road completely blocked for miles. @darylvazmp
28 Oct 2025
📍Aenon town, Clarendon #Melissa #Jamaica
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Scenes from St. Bess. Never have I seen such damage. My heart is broken for this beautiful parish, a parish I’m proud to have represented as MP. We will continue to rebuild together.
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Food For The Poor Jamaica retweeted
Mi need some ply! All those hoarding and battening down you guys did. Please donate the ply. I’ll pick them up for free
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RT @alexiajames_: Pricesmart is FILLED with people getting supplies for people. Warms my heart man
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30 Oct 2025
🚨 #Update: Rural Express Routes
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Every donation, big or small, makes a difference. Let’s come together and help rebuild lives and homes in Jamaica. 🙏🏾🇯🇲 supportjamaica.gov.jm
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