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Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Chevaughn Joseph: Turning tragedy into a lifeline for families battling childhood cancer

by

Ira Mathur
282 days ago
20241006

Chevaughn Joseph, founder of The Just Be­cause Foun­da­tion (JBF), trans­formed the heart­break of los­ing her son in­to a last­ing source of hope. In 2005, her son Jabez—af­fec­tion­ate­ly called JB—was di­ag­nosed with Alve­o­lar Rhab­domyosar­co­ma, a rare and ag­gres­sive child­hood can­cer, at just three-and-a-half years old. For two years, JB fought with courage, but on March 24, 2007, at the age of five and a half, he passed away, leav­ing an unimag­in­able void in Joseph’s life.

To ho­n­our his mem­o­ry and cope with the over­whelm­ing grief, Joseph and her hus­band found­ed JBF on what would have been JB’s 6th birth­day, cre­at­ing a sanc­tu­ary for chil­dren with can­cer in T&T.

Sev­en­teen years lat­er, JBF has be­come a life­line for count­less fam­i­lies. In 2008, Chevaughn led the open­ing of the JBF Pae­di­atric Spe­cial­ty Unit at Mt Hope Chil­dren’s Hos­pi­tal, which is ded­i­cat­ed to chil­dren bat­tling can­cer and oth­er se­ri­ous con­di­tions.

Known as “Aun­ty Chevaughn,” she brings care and com­fort to these chil­dren, dri­ven by the mem­o­ry of JB and her mis­sion to ease the bur­den of oth­er fam­i­lies walk­ing the same painful path.

Joseph’s writ­ing jour­ney be­gan af­ter JB’s pass­ing, ini­tial­ly as a way to share her fam­i­ly’s ex­pe­ri­ence and raise aware­ness about child­hood can­cer. Her words struck a chord, spark­ing sup­port from read­ers.

En­cour­aged to write more, she chan­nelled her grief in­to sto­ry­telling that keeps JB’s mem­o­ry alive and ed­u­cates oth­ers about the re­al­i­ties of child­hood can­cer.

In 2018, she be­gan a news­pa­per col­umn, JBF Talks, shar­ing in­ti­mate ac­counts of JB’s fight, the im­pact on her fam­i­ly, and the strug­gles of oth­er fam­i­lies fac­ing can­cer. Though the col­umn end­ed in 2020, it ig­nit­ed the idea for a six-part book se­ries, Anan­si Goes to Hos­pi­tal, chron­i­cling the boy-spi­der Anan­si as he and his fam­i­ly con­front his can­cer di­ag­no­sis.

Joseph has com­plet­ed two books in the se­ries, with the third un­der­way. Writ­ing has be­come her way of show­ing fam­i­lies in cri­sis that mo­ments of strength and hope can shine through even in the dark­est times. Through Anan­si, she chan­nels her ex­pe­ri­ence with child­hood can­cer in a way that res­onates with young read­ers and fam­i­lies alike.

She con­tin­ues to write un­der her brand, “Chev Writes,” us­ing her voice to in­spire and con­nect with oth­ers. Her lead­er­ship at JBF ex­tends across mul­ti­ple projects—from the JBF Home Away from Home to the JBF Sib­lings On­ly Club and the JBF HOPE Con­cert. Joseph be­lieves her work is a call­ing dri­ven by faith and an un­wa­ver­ing com­mit­ment to turn­ing grief in­to some­thing that helps oth­ers sur­vive.

Through her work, Chevaughn Joseph trans­forms per­son­al loss in­to a force that lifts fam­i­lies, of­fer­ing hope, strength, and com­pas­sion where it’s need­ed most, one child at a time.


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