In the Aftermath: What Food For The Poor Saw in Jamaica - With CEO Ed Raine

26/11/2025 23 min
In the Aftermath: What Food For The Poor Saw in Jamaica - With CEO Ed Raine

Listen "In the Aftermath: What Food For The Poor Saw in Jamaica - With CEO Ed Raine"

Episode Synopsis

Send us a textA storm can level a home in minutes, but rebuilding a life takes an entire community working together. After Hurricane Melissa ripped through western Jamaica, we came back from the ground with a clear picture of what recovery really takes: food when cupboards are empty, safe water when systems fail, a temporary place to sleep, and then a rapid shift toward rebuilding homes and restoring livelihoods. The damage was uneven and often heartbreaking. Some neighborhoods stood untouched while others were flattened. Power lines were down for miles. Families were left wondering not only where they would sleep that night, but how they would earn a living the next morning.In this episode, we walk you through what large scale relief actually looks like. Food For The Poor became the logistics backbone for partners like the World Food Programme, World Central Kitchen, and Global Empowerment Mission. Shipments were cleared. Thousands of family kits were packed every day. Aid moved quickly through a trusted church network that reaches deep into every part of the island. You will hear how volunteers and the Jamaica Defence Force kept assembly lines moving, how the Jamaican diaspora and private donors helped move faster, and how voices like Shaggy, Sean Paul, and Cedella Marley turned their influence into planes, pallets, and hot meals for families in need.But the numbers only tell part of the story. Behind every shipment and every pallet is a person: a fisher who lost his boat, a farmer whose crops and chickens were washed away, a factory worker who may not see electricity for months, and children whose schools must be rebuilt while exam dates keep getting closer. We lay out a simple and focused 30, 60, and 90 day plan to connect emergency relief to long term recovery. That includes ShelterBox tents, rapid homebuilding, boat and engine repairs, new seed and livestock for farmers, and psychosocial support through local churches to help kids regain routine and stability.If Jamaica has ever given you joy through its music, its culture, or simply its warmth, this is a moment to give some of that joy back. Listen to the episode. Share it with someone who cares about effective disaster relief. And if you are able, help us keep supplies moving and homes rising. Subscribe for updates, leave a review so others can find these stories, and consider supporting the rebuild so families can stand on steady ground again.Beyond The Plate is a podcast by international charity, Food For The PoorSign-up for our Best Bite and get exclusive access to our podcast, including food recipes from the 15 countries Food For The Poor serves, giveaways, e-books, and more. Click to join our Best Bite: https://bit.ly/BTP-bestbiteInstagram: @Beyondtheplate.podcastTikTok: @Beyondtheplate.podcastYoutube: Food for the Poor Beyond the Plate

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