

The campaign music video made its debut at the annual Reggae Sumfest in Montego Bay and on the Island Stylee program on Air Jamaica in-flight TV entertainment. The campaign will be incorporated and wrapped around Independence season events in Jamaica and around the world in local Jamaican communities. The spine of the campaign is a Declaration for Positive Action and Accountability which supporters are asked to sign, uphold and share with others.

The campaign also encourages the support of law and order in the society and implores a sense of personal accountability for re-socializing the mindset of the nation, at home and abroad. The campaign also encourages Jamaicans to elevate their level of communication and collaboration in addressing issues of national interest. The “I AM JAMAICA” campaign calls on all Jamaicans, at home and abroad, celebrities, community leaders, artists, entertainers, entrepreneurs and others, to encourage a sense of personal responsibility to inspire each other in embracing our talents and resources as a burgeoning global community for the upliftment and prosperity of our youth and to evoke an emotional connection of hope, positive vibes, prosperity, oneness, and all other core qualities of ‘Brand Jamaica’ among Jamaicans worldwide. This greater nation of Jamaica has yet to be tapped to its full potential. Jamaica, a nation of about 2.8 million persons, enjoys the extended population of over 3.5 million persons of Jamaican descent across the world. The launch of the “I AM JAMAICA” campaign is a marketing/messaging initiative inspired out of the Jamaican Diaspora community to connect the people of Jamaica at home and abroad and to encourage a sense of positive action and accountability. In recent months, a band of Jamaica’s top reggae artists and industry professionals, including Hopeton Lindo, Freddie McGregor, Shaggy, Marcia Griffiths, Courtney John, Fiona, Sophia Brown, Peter Gee, and Robbie Shakespeare partnered to pen and produce a theme song of unity for the nation, whether at home or abroad.

As our nation of Jamaica approaches close to the middle age of Independence, you could say that we are at a pivotal crossroads.
