Overview:

Dancehall singer and rapper Sean Paul and former Miss Jamaica Angelie Spencer are using their resources to support the recovery efforts in Jamaica following Hurricane Melissa, which caused widespread destruction and displacement. Paul and Spencer are working to provide food, water, and solar-powered electricity to affected areas, as well as rebuild infrastructure and support vulnerable families. They have partnered with local and international organizations, including Food For The Poor Jamaica and World Central Kitchen, to bring relief directly to those affected and encourage donations through these organizations.

Overview:

Dancehall singer and rapper Sean Paul and former Miss Jamaica Angelie Spencer are all in for the island nation’s recovery.

Sean Paul had seen nothing like it.ย 

The internationally-known rapper and singer was touring the Jamaican countryside, not long after Hurricane Melissa โ€” a massive Category 5 hurricane packing drenching rain and wind gusts exceeding 200 miles per hour โ€” tore through the western part of the lush island nation. Amid the demolished homes and snapped power poles Melissa left in her wake, however, Paul was particularly struck by one indicator of the devastation the deadly storm inflicted on his home country.

โ€œI keep saying to people, โ€˜Thereโ€™s no leaves on the trees, for miles and miles,โ€™โ€ says Paul, who is on the ground to support ongoing recovery efforts on the island. โ€œIโ€™ve never seen that before.โ€

Some trees โ€œlook sun-blasted, like driftwood at a lake,โ€ he says. โ€So you can imagine seeing the houses just splattered over the hills.โ€ย ย ย 

RELATED: Hurricane Melissa: Devastation in Jamaica and How to Help

With hit songs like โ€œGimme the Lightโ€ and โ€œTemperature,โ€ and fans on every continent, Paul, the musician considered a worldwide ambassador of Jamaican music, is using his resources to help his countrymen and women. Together with Angelie Spencer, a former Miss Jamaica, Paul also is using his star power to keep global attention on the countryโ€™s long, difficult road to recovery.ย 

โ€œIโ€™m asking all my fans, friends, and supporters worldwide: If you can, please give what you can,โ€ said the dancehall artist born Sean Paul Ryan Henriques.ย 

Paul and Spencer took the time to speak with Word In Black about their work.

Hurricane Melissa: A Monster Storm

When Melissa made landfall in Jamaica on October 28, the destruction was swift and brutal. The hurricane โ€” one of the strongest ever recorded in the region โ€” unleashed sustained winds of 185 mph. It also slammed the region with a record-setting wind gust of 252 mph.ย 

The monster storm drowned communities with 1.5 to 2 feet of rainfall, and triggered widespread flooding and landslides across the island. Storm surge from the hurricane reached more thanย 9 feet in some areas.ย 

An aerial view shows destroyed buildings following the passage of Hurricane Melissa, in Black River, St. Elizabeth, Jamaica on October 29, 2025. Hurricane Melissa bore down on the Bahamas October 29 after cutting a path of destruction through the Caribbean, leaving 30 people dead or missing in Haiti and parts of Jamaica and Cuba in ruins.
Somewhat weakened but still threatening, Melissa will bring damaging winds and flooding rains to the Bahamas Wednesday before moving on to Bermuda late Thursday, according to the US National Hurricane Center (NHC). (Photo by Ricardo Makyn / AFP) (Photo by RICARDO MAKYN/AFP via Getty Images)

As the wind and water receded, the scale of the devastation became apparent. The storm severely damaged or destroyed roughly 116,000 buildings and displaced as many asย 25,000 people. It ruined tens of thousandsย of farms and caused power outages across the island.

Now, authorities and national agencies are in a race against time to restore basic services, clear debris, and continue assessing the damage to homes, roads, and the Jamaican economy. Tourism is the countryโ€™s leading revenue sources

As the cleanup continues, public-health officials have raised alarms over the growing disease threat from mosquitoes, rodents and unclean water. In November, the Jamaican government declared an outbreak of leptospirosis โ€” a bacterial infection often linked to flood-contaminated water and soil that has killed at least six people.

Emergency shelters have been set up for displaced families, and social-support groups are coordinating the delivery of food, hygiene kits, and temporary housing materials. In addition to helping provide food and clothing, Paul and Spencer are helping rebuild infrastructure like houses, roads, and solar powered electricity.ย 

Bringing Light and Food

Paul and Spencer have been on the ground since the islandโ€™s airports reopened shortly after the storm. Spencer, who was crowned Miss Jamaica in 1994, is a humanitarian focused on advocacy, community rebuilding, supporting vulnerable families across Jamaica.

Light and electric power is โ€œpretty well sold out in a lot of places now in Jamaica,โ€ says Spencer. โ€œSo, anybody who wants to [can] send things from the States โ€” solar fans, solar lightsโ€“because we always have sunshine, so at least those will charge up, and they have a little bit of light.โ€

Together with a local nonprofit, Paul foundation has issued a plea for his fans worldwide to contribute to relief efforts. In a heartfelt Instagram post from his home in Kingston, he pledged to match every dollar donated to the fund, up $50,000.ย 

โ€œThrough the Sean Paul Foundation, weโ€™ve partnered with Food For The Poor Jamaica to bring relief directly to those affected,โ€ he said.

Paul and Spencer have been on the ground in Jamaica since the islandโ€™s airports reopened.

โ€œI have to commend the Jamaica public service, because theyโ€™re really going hard trying to restore but thereโ€™s a lot to do,โ€ Spencer says. โ€œEvery line is down. Concrete poles that were in the middle of the street โ€” theyโ€™re gone. All the light poles are down, the wires are gone.โ€

Paul says the challenges are steep, but he is confident the area can recover.ย 

โ€œWith all these places, weโ€™re giving out the care packages [and] weโ€™re getting the water and the solar and styling it so that it can be a hub,โ€ he says. โ€œAnd you know, the economy in those areas can start back.โ€ย 

Paulโ€™s organization has also teamed up with World Central Kitchen, the internationally recognized nonprofit that works with local restaurants to feed hungry people during times of crisis.ย 

โ€œ[Their] objective is to get little areas back up and self-sufficient on their own,โ€ says Paul. โ€œSo, theyโ€™re working with 30 different restaurants in Jamaica, and theyโ€™re also cooking themselves over 2 million meals right now.โ€ย ย 

Sometimes, โ€œIโ€™m giving them rice or food stuff and they canโ€™t wash their hands. And so, the hot meal is appreciated,โ€ Paul adds.ย  โ€œAfter a while we can start moving out of these communities once theyโ€™re self-sufficient. World Central Kitchen and Food for the Poor, Jamaica, are just doing great work.โ€ย 

โ€œEvery donation counts, no matter how small. Together, we can make a big difference.โ€ย 

Paul and Spencer are encouraging donations through Food for the Poor, Jamaicaย  and World Central Kitchen.

This story was originally published on Word In Black on December 1st, 2025

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