Ontarians look to aid Caribbean in wake of Hurricane Beryl - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 01:11 PM | Calgary | -3.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Ontarians look to aid Caribbean in wake of Hurricane Beryl

As the storm moves toward the Cayman Islands and Mexico, many Ontarians with Caribbean roots are now fundraising to help families back home.

Fundraisers collecting relief donations to be sent to impacted islands

Toronto organization tries to help those affected by Hurricane Beryl in Grenada

3 months ago
Duration 1:23
Hurricane Beryl continues to make its way toward Mexico's coast, leaving flattened buildings and torn power lines through the Caribbean. Metro Morning host Molly Thomas spoke to Anyika Mark, director of communications for Black Urbanism TO. The organization is helping to co-organize a fundraiser for hurricane relief in Grenada on Friday.

As Hurricane Beryl moves toward the Cayman Islands and Mexico, Ontarians with Caribbean connections are concerned about their friends and family back homeand working to aid in the recovery.

Rowan Thompson's entire family was hunkered down back home in Jamaica Thursday, as the Category 4 storm ripped through the island, while he tried to stay in touch from a Niagara farm, along with a group of other migrant workers.

"Me and my co-workers, we were very concerned about our relatives back home and our friends," he told CBC Radio's Metro Morning Thursday.

Thompson says he's been able to reach his family, but he's waiting to hear about others.

"I'm still concerned about friends and other Jamaicans," he said. "Some lost their home because of the devastation."

The hurricane caused damage and destroyedhomes inSt. Vincent and the Grenadines, Grenada, Barbados and other eastern Caribbean islands this week. As the hurricane moves on toward the Cayman Islands and Mexico, the overall death toll across the Caribbean hasnowreachedat least 10 people.

Torontonians are looking to help.

Local charities trying to get relief to island nations

Anyika Mark, director of communications for Black Urbanism TO, says she was relieved earlier this week to hear her family in Grenada is fine, and her organization is now fundraisingto bring relief to the island nation.

She and a friend from Reclaim, Rebuild Eg West are hosting a fundraiser Friday, collecting relief supplies.

"This personally impacted us and we wanted to do our part to make sure we could get as many things down there as possible," she told Metro Morning.

A man walks past a fallen tree on a street with debris.
A man walks past a fallen tree after Hurricane Beryl hit the island, in Kingston, Jamaica, July 4, 2024. (Marco Bello/Reuters)

Mark and her co-organizerhave been in constant contact with family back home, she said, trying to determine what people need. They'll be collecting non-perishable food items, toiletries, sleeping bags, blankets, blow-up mattresses and other essentials to help those struggling in the storm's aftermath.

The fundraiser will be the first of many, she said, as she hopes to help collect aid for other islands impacted by the hurricane.

Global Medic, a Canadian charity, is also looking to bring supplies down to Caribbean countries as travel reopens.

Executive director Rahul Singh says air travel to affected islands is reopening, and they'll be sending supplies to Jamaica, Grenada and small islands around St. Vincent and the Grenadines. He says getting large transports of aid to smaller islands will be tough, as they don't have capacity for larger planes, but the charity is already mobilizing.

He says Torontonians can help by donating money and essential items to the charity to make sure people who need aid get it. Global Medic is also looking for volunteers to help pack supplies for transport.

As communications reopen fully, he saysthey'll have a better idea of what's needed where, but some things are already clear.

"It's all the basics," he said. "People need access to clean drinking water. They need their roofs back on their homes. They need access to some food."

With files from Dwight Drummond, Metro Morning