50 Cent Donates $5 Million to Build Homeless Support Centers in Queens: “No One Should Have to Sleep Outside in the Cold”

In an inspiring act of generosity, rap icon 50 Cent has pledged the entirety of his $5

million in recent tour and sponsorship earnings to fund a new network of homeless

support centers in his hometown of Queens, New York City.

The initiative – one of the most significant personal donations from a hip-hop artist

in recent memory-will create 150 permanent homes and 300 shelter beds for

those in need.

At a press conference held in South Jamaica, Queens, just blocks from where he

grew up, 50 Cent – born Curtis Jackson – spoke with visible emotion as he

outlined his plan.

“I’ve seen too many people in my hometown struggling to get through the cold

nights without a roof over their heads,” he said, pausing as cameras flashed.

“I promised myself that if I ever had the chance, I would help.

No one should have to sleep outside in the cold.”

For the rapper who once symbolized the grit and survival of New York’s streets, this

gesture marks a profound full-circle moment.

Decades after he rose from poverty and violence to global superstardom, Jackson

is using his success to address the very hardship he once lived among.

From the Streets to Stardom — and Back to the Community

Born and raised in South Jamaica, 50 Cent’s early life was defined by struggle.

Losing his mother at a young age and growing up amid the crack epidemic of the

1980s, he learned resilience on streets that too often offered few opportunities.

“Queens made me,” he has said in interviews. “Everything I am started here – the

hunger, the hustle, the heart.”

That hunger carried him from underground mixtapes to mainstream dominance with

his debut album Get Rich or Die Tryin’ in 2003 — a title that now reads as both

prophecy and parable.

Two decades later, the same artist who once rapped about survival is ensuring

others can simply survive through the harsh New York winters.

The Queens Housing and Hope Initiative, as Jackson has titled the project, will

begin construction in early 2026.

It will include a central resource hub, a 24-hour emergency shelter, transitional

apartments for families, and community programs offering job placement, addiction

recovery, and mental-health support.

The design, according to city officials, will emphasize “dignity, safety, and a path

forward” for residents who have long been left behind.

“A Heart Still in Queens”

Speaking to a crowd of community members, journalists, and local leaders, 50 Cent

appeared deeply personal in tone – far from the swaggering persona that once

defined his public image.

He spoke about his teenage years walking the same streets where, today, he hopes

to build shelters.

“I used to dream about getting out of here,” he admitted, “but when I did, I realized

getting out isn’t enough.

Real success is when you come back and change something.”

He also reflected on the nights he spent without stable housing in his youth,

bouncing between friends’ couches and struggling to keep his dream alive.

“There were times I didn’t know where I was gonna sleep.

I know that feeling – when the world moves on and you feel like nobody sees you.”

That empathy, he said, became the driving force behind his decision. “Money

comes and goes.

But when you see someone warm for the first time in months — that’s real wealth.”

Community Leaders Praise the Gift

Local officials have praised Jackson’s unprecedented contribution.

Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called the donation “transformative,”

adding, “This is more than charity – it’s leadership.

Curtis grew up here, he knows our challenges, and now he’s turning compassion

into action.”

Housing advocates say the project could serve as a national model.

“What 50 Cent is doing isn’t just about beds — it’s about rebuilding dignity,” said

Linda Morales, director of the New York Shelter Network.

“He’s putting a spotlight on a crisis that too many people walk past every day.”

Residents, too, were moved.

Outside the press conference, lifelong Queens resident Jamal Turner, 52, said, “I

watched that man come up from nothing.

Now he’s giving back to the same streets that raised him. That’s real Queens

pride.”

A Legacy Beyond Music

Over the years, 50 Cent has expanded his empire from music to business —

producing hit television shows like Power, launching successful beverage and

clothing ventures, and mentoring younger artists.

Yet, he insists that this moment, more than any platinum record or Emmy

nomination, feels like his most meaningful milestone.

“People remember the hits,” he said with a slight smile, “but I want them to

remember this — that I did something that mattered.”

The rapper also hinted at long-term plans to expand the initiative beyond Queens,

potentially bringing similar centers to other boroughs of New York City and

eventually to cities across the U.

S. “If this works – and I know it will – we’ll take it nationwide,” he promised.

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Construction on the first center is expected to begin in early 2026, with doors

opening by late 2027.

The facilities will be funded entirely by Jackson’s $5 million contribution, along with

matching grants from corporate sponsors he has personally recruited.

As the event concluded, a large banner behind him read in bold white letters: “From

Queens, For Queens.”

50 Cent raised his hand to the crowd and offered one final reflection: “When you

grow up here, you learn early that nobody’s gonna save you.

But maybe – just maybe — we can save each other.”

And with that, the man who once rapped about making it out of Queens walked

offstage having given something far greater than a performance — a promise of

shelter, warmth, and hope to the place that built him.