Just In Time

November 4, 2025 • Jamaica
Samaritan's Purse teams are operating in hard-hit communities in southwest Jamaica.
Samaritan's Purse teams are operating in hard-hit communities in southwest Jamaica.

After Hurricane Melissa's destruction, Jamaicans are thankful to be alive and grateful for the relief being provided by Samaritan's Purse.

Anthony Anderson stood atop a pile of rubble as he recounted the long, terrifying hours of Hurricane Melissa’s landfall in southwestern Jamaica. That same pile, where he’d returned to salvage what he could, had been his home in Black River before the Category 5 storm reduced it to splinters and into a crushing prison where he thought he’d pray and breathe his last.

“I counted myself a dead man,” he said.

Anthony returned after the storm to salvage what he could.

Anthony survived Hurricane Melissa after being trapped beneath debris from his collapsed home.

He was pinned down by wood planks and heavy chunks of concrete as the storm roared. When the sky turned silent again, he grew desperate to escape.

“When I called for help there was no one to hear me,” Anthony said. “I said to myself, ‘If I stay here, I’ll die.’”

Then he saw a sliver of sunlight through the layers of heavy debris and began digging. He calls his survival a miracle.

“I should have needed a hammer or crowbars,” he said. “I only had my arms, and that’s why I think it must have been God Himself. God gave me extra strength that day.”

Close-up portrait of a man standing in front of storm-damaged buildings and trees in Black River, Jamaica, after Hurricane Melissa.

He returned after the storm to salvage what he could.

As he emerged, bruised and cut up, his community had been transformed into a miles-long debris field. Homes were gone. The local hospital was destroyed. He talked to others with the same look of shock that he was feeling.

Fellow residents described not knowing where to begin to put their hometown back together. In this hard-hit area of southwest Jamaica, the destruction is so complete that it makes it hard to catch your breath. Some neighborhoods were only accessible by boat after the storm.

A majority of the western portions of the island are still without power or access to clean water.

“The saying goes ‘to pick up the pieces,’” one survivor said, “but here, there are no pieces to pick up.”

Anthony continues to remind himself and others in his community that God is still at work: “When God is in the midst, all things are possible.”

Aerial view of destroyed homes and debris-strewn streets in Black River, Jamaica, after Hurricane Melissa.

There is devastation across southwest Jamaica, where entire neighborhoods were flattened by Hurricane Melissa’s Category 5 winds.

A Supply Chain of Relief in Jesus’ Name

Samaritan’s Purse has been responding to Jamaica since Melissa struck, and we are establishing relief efforts in Black River and other communities.

Samaritan’s Purse nurse treating a patient inside the Emergency Field Hospital in Black River, Jamaica, after Hurricane Melissa.

A Samaritan’s Purse nurse cares for a patient inside the Emergency Field Hospital in Black River, Jamaica, where medical teams are treating those affected by Hurricane Melissa.

Four airlifts have carried more than 100 tons of relief to the island. In addition to household kits, we are establishing an Emergency Field Hospital, setting up community water filtration systems, and providing household water filtration.

Our Emergency Field Hospital opened Nov. 5 and is equipped to provide Black River and surrounding communities with emergency medical and surgical care, obstetrics, and pharmacy and lab services.

We are working alongside community and church leaders to identify needs and provide supplies to hurting people.

Pastor Steve Hepburn was reeling when he arrived with two other leaders of New Testament Church at our first distribution on Jamaica. Residents, he said, have faced things they’ve never faced.

“Our church people and community folks are distraught. They are in a state they’ve never been in before,” he said.

Pastor Hepburn and leaders from his church were among scores of local church leaders who came to gather supplies from Samaritan’s Purse. Through the provision of 1,300 household kits, area churches are able to meet needs as families face heat and rain and nights without electricity. Each household kit includes shelter tarp, household water filters, and solar lights.

Smiling Jamaican church leader holding blue tarp supplies inside a Samaritan’s Purse distribution warehouse after Hurricane Melissa.

A Jamaican church leader collects tarps and other relief supplies from a Samaritan’s Purse distribution center to deliver to his community.

Many churches on Jamaica are connected with Samaritan’s Purse through Operation Christmas Child and through our response on the island after Hurricane Beryl last year.

“Samaritan’s Purse has come just in time,” Pastor Hepburn said. “You were here last year during Hurricane Beryl and you have been here many other times. You are touching lives. Pray that the hand of God will continue to rest upon our nation as we go through this,” he said.

FOLLOW OUR RESPONSE IN JAMAICA

Alric Brown, who serves with Pastor Hepburn, shared a similar heartbreaking story of whole communities that became homeless overnight as Hurricane Melissa churned along the western part of the island in violent winds and torrential rains. He was also praising God.

Group of Jamaican volunteers lifting boxes of Samaritan’s Purse relief supplies inside a warehouse after Hurricane Melissa.

Volunteers and church partners work together at a Samaritan’s Purse distribution site in Jamaica to prepare emergency shelter materials for families affected by Hurricane Melissa.

“We’re giving thanks that there aren’t more lives lost from this storm,” he said.

Shana Barnett, who works locally with Samaritan’s Purse church partners through Operation Christmas Child, said she is grateful for God’s protection and His provision through our relief operations.

“We will rebuild. We will become stronger—the Lord is with us,” she said. “He has spared our lives so my prayer is really that the people will see that there is hope. They’re not alone at all. Samaritan’s Purse is equipping pastors to reach their communities and share Jesus Christ with them.”

SUPPORT
Hurricane Melissa Relief Samaritan's Purse is responding to the devastation on Jamaica brought by Hurricane Melissa. We airlifted an Emergency Field Hospital to the island and are treating scores of patients daily in the devastated coastal town of Black River. Mobile medical teams are also caring for those in remote areas. Multiple airlifts have carried well more than 500,000 pounds of relief to the island, including community water systems, household filters, solar lights, hygiene kits, medical supplies, cooking kits, shelter tarps, and more.

Hurricane Melissa Relief 014078
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