Africa Stands With Jamaica: Post-G20 Leaders Unite for Hurricane Melissa Relief
When Hurricane Melissa tore across Jamaica, the island faced one of the most devastating natural disasters in its modern history. Homes fell. Roads washed out. Entire communities were left in need.
But in the middle of the storm’s aftermath came a moment of powerful unity — one that bridged continents, cultures, and the shared heartbeat of the African and Caribbean Diaspora.
Fresh off the global stage of the G20, a post-summit link-up brought South African artist and cultural ambassador Don Dada into the same room as:
Jamaica’s Prime Minister Andrew Michael Holness
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Kamina Johnson Smith
The purpose wasn’t politics.
It wasn’t ceremony.
It was relief, solidarity, and action.
In that room, surrounded by dignitaries, cultural leaders, and supporters of the island, Don Dada expressed gratitude to everyone present — then delivered a soul-stirring performance of his anthem “Rise Up.”
The message was unmistakable:
**Jamaica will rise.
But the Diaspora must rise with her.**
This moment sparked an international call to rebuild the island with love. As relief efforts scale and communities struggle to recover, the unity between South Africa and Jamaica becomes a shining symbol of what global Black solidarity looks like in real time.
This is the Diaspora reconnecting.
This is Africa extending its hand.
This is Jamaica standing strong through the storm.
And now — Jamaica needs YOU.
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🌍 HOW TO HELP RIGHT NOW
➡️ DONATE TODAY
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One Jamaica. One Africa. One Diaspora. One mission: Rebuild with love.


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