When businesswoman and concert promoter CJ Milan declared, “We’ve profited from Jamaica, now we need to take care of Jamaica,” it wasn’t just a quote — it was a call to action. In the wake of Hurricane Melissa, the most devastating storm to hit the island in more than 170 years, Milan has traded sold-out concert stages for hands-on humanitarian work, teaming up with dancehall star Vanessa Bling to bring tangible relief to hundreds of families in need.
For Milan — best known for her Reggae Fest brand and recent success with Bounty Killer and Vybz Kartel’s historic Barclays Center concerts — the devastation in Jamaica struck close to home. While in the country promoting Mavado’s “Return of the Gully Gad” concert set for December 27 at Plantation Cove, she quickly shifted gears from entertainment to emergency response.
“It just had to happen. This has to be a global effort; I’m here, Reggae Fest is here. We’ve profited from Jamaica — now we need to take care of Jamaica,” Milan said in a statement to the STAR, underscoring her ties to the island and her belief that success in dancehall must always circle back to community upliftment.
Together with Vanessa Bling, Milan launched a relief initiative that has already reached Hanover and St. Elizabeth, distributing supplies to over 1,000 families. Each care package — filled with water, rice, juice, canned goods, and hygiene essentials — is a lifeline for Jamaicans left struggling in the hurricane’s aftermath. The team now plans to extend their efforts to St. Ann and Manchester in the coming days.
“CJ Milan is a woman of stature; always representing for the culture, and we decided that we need to get this going immediately,” Vanessa said, adding that she was moved by the urgency to act rather than just speak.
While other notable figures like Beenie Man, Masicka, Sean Paul, Shaggy, Dunw3ll, 450, and Romeich Major have also mobilized relief drives, Milan and Bling’s partnership stands out for its vision — merging global industry influence with grassroots compassion. Milan’s presence on the ground has turned her from promoter to protector, using her platform to connect the entertainment world with Jamaica’s most vulnerable.
For Vanessa Bling, the disaster has been both heartbreaking and inspiring. Known for her spiritual depth and resilience, she revealed that the emotional weight of the tragedy briefly silenced her creative voice — until she began working on a Melissa-inspired song meant to comfort the nation.
“I went to the studio, started singing but the song was so sad, I stopped recording. I’ll return tomorrow. I sing with emotion, and the energy has to be right,” she shared.
Despite personal losses and emotional exhaustion, both women have found strength in the unity and generosity of Jamaicans at home and abroad. “We have life — it can’t get any better than that,” Vanessa said. “I’m seeing thousands giving back and many countries donating. We will rise again.”
For Milan, this moment has become more than a humanitarian mission — it’s a moral compass for the entertainment industry. The same passion that fills arenas now fuels her relief efforts, redefining what it means to represent Jamaica on the global stage.
In her own words: “I’m here now, taking it on full force. My family’s alive, Jamaica is alive — and we will rebuild stronger than before.”

2 weeks ago
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