Asia Pacific Alliance – Sri Lanka

Reviving Education in the Wake of Cyclone Ditwah: A Joint Initiative by HSBC and APAD in Sri Lanka

Reviving Education in the Wake of Cyclone Ditwah: A Joint Initiative by HSBC and APAD in Sri Lanka

Feb 19, 2026

When Cyclone Ditwah swept across Sri Lanka, it not only tore through roads and mountains, but it also quietly unsettled the routines that gave people a sense of normalcy. In the aftermath of the disaster, most attention was understandably directed toward rebuilding homes and livelihoods while a quieter loss went largely unseen. For children, the cyclone erased familiar classrooms, the school routines, and the certainties of daily life, stripping away much of what they had known as usual.

The scale of the impact was immense. Across the country, more than 555,000 children were unable to attend school as floods and landslides damaged educational facilities and forced families to relocate. As the 2026 academic year approached, many parents already grappling with income loss and unsafe living conditions faced an impossible choice: meet basic household needs or find money for school supplies their children had lost to the disaster. For families with multiple school-going children, the risk of interrupted education and dropouts grew steadily  Through assessment and on-the-ground discussion, one reality became clear: it was not a lack of motivation keeping children away from school, but the absence of the most basic learning materials. Books had been washed away from school, but the absence of the most basic learning materials. Books had been washed away, school bags destroyed, uniforms damaged, and access to replacements limited by reduced purchasing power. In some communities, children were displaced to safety centers; in others, schools themselves were damaged or temporarily closed. Education, already fragile, was pushed to the margins of recovery efforts.

Recognising this silent crisis, HSBC, in partnership with the Asia Pacific Alliance for Disaster Management – Sri Lanka, chose to focus on where recovery efforts often fall short for children. Through a targeted and time-critical intervention, the partnership set out to restore not just education, but dignity, confidence, and hope. Between 21 and 29 January 2026, 2,000 school packs were delivered to children across ten of the most vulnerable and hard-to-reach schools in Kandy, Nuwara Eliya, Puttalam, and Mannar.

Reaching these children was no easy task. Roads were still scarred by landslides, access routes remained unsafe, and in some areas, vehicles could not reach school gates. Yet with determination and the support of local communities, school packs were carried, sometimes by hand, and sometimes through multiple vehicles, so that every child could receive theirs on the very days schools reopened. Timing was everything. For children walking into classrooms after months of disruption, arriving prepared made all the difference.

Each school bag represented more than stationery. It symbolised a fresh start. Filled with books, writing materials, reusable water bottles, and lunch boxes, the packs ensured that children could learn without worry for more than a year, while also encouraging environmentally responsible habits. Teachers spoke of renewed enthusiasm in classrooms; principals spoke of relief and how they can implement plastic-free school premises with the introduction of stainless steel lunch boxes and bottles. Parents spoke of burdens lifted at a moment when hope was scarce.

For children from daily-wage and estate worker families, this support was transformative. Receiving a school bag before the first day of term restored confidence, pride, and a sense of belonging, things no child should lose to disaster. In schools that had received little or no assistance before, the message was clear: they were not forgotten.

This initiative demonstrated that meaningful recovery is not only about rebuilding structures, it is also about protecting futures. By investing in children at the most critical moment, HSBC and A-PAD SL  ensured that education did not become another casualty of Cyclone Ditwah. Instead, it became a pathway to resilience, reminding communities that even after immense loss, hope can return.

Ms. Dilini Fernando of HSBC handing over school supplies to children
Students helping out in unison to unload school bags for distribution at the hall premises
School supplies distribution at St. John’s Primary School – Kandapola