According to the official language of Sri Lanka - Sinhalese, the word ‗Sidr‘ stands for ‗eye‘. Definitely, the Sidr does not look like the eyes. The Sidr, the terrible eye, rushed with great signal number 10 and smashed the whole southern districts on the night of November 15, 2007. With wind speed up to 280 km per hour and tidal surge of 20 to 25 feet high, the Sidr flattened the Sundarbans, Mongla port, Khulna, Bhola, Patuakhali, Barguna, Jhalakhati, Pirospur, Satkhira, Shariatpur, Faridpur, Gopalganj, Bagerhat and Barisal. The Sidr has devastated crops, houses, trees, mangrove forest, livestock, birds, animals, infrastructures etc. The death has crossed eight thousand people. More than a thousand are reported dead according to the grief-stricken relatives. Preliminary investigations have suggested that nearly 60000 persons have been injured. It is also apparent that more than a million rural households have been seriously affected. Standing crops on 1.6 million acres have been fully ruined. Over 8000 educational institutions have been fully or partially destroyed. This has hampered educational activities of nearly 750,000 students. Preliminary assessment has indicated that nearly 20 percent of the vegetables have been destroyed. Almost one-third of the Sundarbans, a world heritage, has been totally demolished. The government of this country supplies relief to the affected people and ensures rehabilitation. The concerned authority must ensure information about the natural disasters, warn people and shift them to safe places. The young students can help people with rescue operation. They can raise awareness among the people so that they can take precautionary measures. They can also work in coordination with the govt. NGOs and donor agencies to assist the affected people of natural disasters like the Sidr.