new video loaded: The Jamaican Families Torn Apart by Hurricane Melissa
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The Jamaican Families Torn Apart by Hurricane Melissa
Days after a powerful hurricane made landfall in Jamaica, thousands of residents are now homeless and trying to make sense of how they narrowly survived. The New York Times traveled to the stormβs center in Black River, and found a community destroyed β without food or clean water β where families are desperate and still traumatized after being cut off from the outside world.
βThe last thing I said to my sister, I called her and I said, βSister, please be safe. Be safe.β And I said, βI love you.β And that was the last time.β These sisters have just returned to their home outside of Black River, Jamaica, days after a Category 5 hurricane destroyed their community and tore the family apart. βThey said, βLet us make a chain.ββ βSomething like this.β βYou want to hold on one another.β βYou want to hold on one another.β βMy grandson, he was the one who taking us out because the water wasnβt up that much. So we was trying to escape.β Boreen Barrett was swept away by a blast of seawater as Hurricane Melissa made landfall. She was a mother of four. βWhere was your sisterβs body found?β βThere, across the bush over there.β βWas it like a wave that just came through?β βThatβs when it swept her away.β At least 28 people are known to have died from the storm, but the full impact on peopleβs lives is far greater. Thousands are now displaced with little food and water, and aid has been slow to arrive. Just outside of Black River, we found Nicole Gowdie and her partner, Oliver Stewart, sheltering in their car along the road next to what was left of their house. They told us they barely survived. Just over a year ago, a Category 4 hurricane hit this same coast and communities were still recovering. This time, the need is more vast and more urgent as days pass for many stuck without basic necessities. The Jamaican government has been leading an international aid effort. The first supply convoy arrived in Black River on Nov. 1, and airdrops to more isolated communities are scheduled for the coming days.

By Brent McDonald, Singeli Agnew and Ben Laffin
November 3, 2025


