When Cyclone Ditwah struck Sri Lanka on 28 November 2025, it triggered one of the most destructive natural disasters the country has faced in decades. Making landfall along the eastern coast, the cyclone brought widespread flooding, landslides, and infrastructure collapse across all 25 districts. National damage estimates have reached approximately USD $4.1 billion — but beyond the financial toll lies a deeper, long-term impact on children and education.
Today, the recovery of the school system remains one of the most urgent needs. Rebuilding safe classrooms is not only about restoring buildings — it is about restoring opportunity, protection, and hope for thousands of students.
Post-disaster assessments by national and international agencies — including UNICEF— highlight the scale of educational disruption:
In central districts and hill country regions — including Badulla — repeated rainfall and landslides have delayed repairs and made several school sites unsafe. Children studying in temporary locations often lack proper classrooms, sanitation facilities, furniture, and learning materials. Extended disruption increases the risks of dropout, child labor, and long-term educational inequality.
Temporary learning spaces help in the short term, but they cannot replace resilient, purpose-built classrooms. Proper school infrastructure provides:
For underprivileged communities, rebuilding schools is one of the most effective ways to accelerate recovery.
Sarnia No 1 Tamil Vidyalayam, located in Badulla, has been officially advised to relocate due to the severe impact of Cyclone Ditwah and ongoing safety concerns at the current premises.
After careful assessment by the relevant authorities, the existing site has been deemed unsuitable for continued school operations. The safety and wellbeing of our students, teachers, and staff remain our highest priority.
Arrangements are now underway to move the school to a new, safer location. During this transition period, we are working closely with stakeholders to ensure minimal disruption to students’ education.
Further updates regarding the relocation timeline and interim arrangements will be communicated in due course.
AEW has already demonstrated proven impact through a previous infrastructure project at Habarathththawala School, where a dual-purpose classroom complex was successfully delivered for underprivileged children. That facility continues to support both education and community activities, showing how targeted construction projects create lasting value.
Cyclone Ditwah’s effects will be measured not only in damaged roads and homes, but in lost school time and interrupted childhoods — unless recovery is supported with urgency and purpose. Investing in classroom construction delivers measurable, generational impact.
By pledging funds toward this project, donors are helping transform disaster recovery into educational opportunity — giving children safe places to learn, grow, and rebuild their futures.
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