Kitson Town Barber saves suicidal woman

Jermaine Hurst, a barber from Kitson Town in St. Catherine, is being hailed for his heroic act in preventing an attempted suicide along the Portmore Causeway.

About midday on April 19, the barber visited a section of the Causeway to enjoy his usual pastime of fishing when he noticed a woman in her mid-40s walk past him, towards the sea, without saying a word.

He became concerned as the car that she drove to the spot was left running with the air conditioning on and the windows down.

“Yuh alright?” Hurst asked. He told JIS News that he called out to her, noting that while she nodded, indicating that she was fine, “her face was saying something else.”

He again tried to engage her by asking if she had visited the area before and if she would like to join him in catching fish, but she only responded, “huh” and shrugged her shoulders.

“I wanted to see a smile on her face. It is a regular habit for me to put smiles on people’s faces, so I said to her, “It will soon be your time to get a try [catching fish], but she only said ‘huh’ again,” he told JIS News.

Sharon Coburn Robinson

Hurst said that at one point the lady asked if he could swim and told him that she saw what looked like worms in the water, which he assured her were only small fishes.

Not able to concentrate on the task of fishing, Hurst said he tried to engage the lady in conversation when she uttered the words he did not want to hear: “a jump mi a go jump off enuh. Mi mek up mi mind. A jump mi a go jump off.”

Frightened, he said he shouted: “What yuh just seh? Yuh serious? Look here, a mi and you alone out here, and me not going to be able to live with that.”

Her reply was, “It is not like you know me,” he recalled.

Not knowing what to do, Hurst asked for her telephone, which she told him was in the car, along with details as to why she wanted to end her life. She said she did not want her body to be in the water for very long, where it would be eaten by worms.

Recognising that he had to get help, Hurst discreetly called the 119 emergency number, and while waiting for the police to arrive, he distracted the stranger by asking about her family, and she held up her fingers to indicate that she had three children.

“I said to her, ‘Your children are going to see you in a real life. They are not going to see you in a coffin.’ I said a number of things just to keep her with me, trying to get what I could out of her,” Hurst said.

He told JIS News that on seeing the police vehicle approaching, she said, “yuh call police,” and he told her that he had to help her.

In addition to the police officers, there was a rescue boat with medical personnel, and members of the Fire Brigade also responded to the incident.

Hurst said that after the stranger left with the emergency responders, he felt a deep sense of relief. He shared that he could not have lived with himself if he had ignored the lady’s plight.

“I felt dehydrated; my throat was dry because I had talked [to her] for about two hours. If she had jumped, a nuh mi push her off, but mi could not live with that, and mi just wanted help fi come. It was tremendous work, and it was nerve-racking,” he said.

Head of the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) Public Safety and Traffic Enforcement Branch (PSTEB), Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Gary McKenzie, whose team, along with officers from the South St. Andrew Division, responded to the emergency, said the police are well equipped to handle these situations.

Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Gary McKenzie

He commended Hurst for his actions.

“This is the kind of care that we really should have when it comes to dealing with each other. This gentleman was not trained to deal with situations like that, but as human beings, we are able to detect and to show the side of us that will help others to get out of distress, and this is very commendable,” ACP McKenzie said.

Principal Director in the Ministry of Culture, Gender, Entertainment, and Sport, Sharon Coburn Robinson, said support programmes are available through the Bureau of Gender Affairs (BGA) for men and women who are in distress.

She encouraged persons to reach out when they need help by calling 876-553-0372, 876-236-0387 (for females), and (for males) 876-553-0387, as well as the BGA’s 24-hour toll-free number, 1-888-NO-ABUSE.

She also hailed Hurst’s actions.

“He was a bystander, but he had human kindness running in his veins. We commend him and all the other men and women like him who are bystanders but they understand the importance of jumping in and doing their part. This is a life saved,” Coburn-Robinson said.

She told JIS News that the BGA will be looking into some “tangible recognition” for Hurst as well as including him in the entity’s first responder programme.

Source: JIS

Nadine Harris: