Sri Lankan actor and musician GK Reginold rides a motorised fishing boat through Colombo's suburbs, hoping to bring food and water to those in desperate need.
Some of the families, Mr Reginold says, have not received aid for days, isolated by the South Asian island nation's worst weather disaster in recent years.
Cyclone Ditwah lashed the country last week, bringing catastrophic floods and landslides that killed more than 400 people, left hundreds missing and destroyed 20,000 homes.
But the deluge has also inspired volunteerism among its people, as they face what their president has described as the most challenging natural disaster in its history.
“The main reason why I wanted to do this, is to at least help them to have one meal,” Mr Reginold tells the BBC. “And I was so happy that I was able to do that.”
More than one million people have been affected by the disaster and President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has declared a state of emergency.
Sri Lanka's military has deployed helicopters for rescue operations, while humanitarian aid is flowing in from foreign governments and non-governmental organisations.
In Colombo's Wijerama neighbourhood, activists who protested against former president Gotabaya Rajapaksa in 2022 are now helping run a community kitchen that churns out food aid. The protests from three years ago were fuelled by a spiralling economic crisis that caused shortages of fuel, food and medicine. Public anger exploded and led to Rajapaksa being ousted. Now, that political activism is being channelled to cyclone relief.
“Some volunteers came after work, some took turns and some even took leave to be there,” Sasindu Sahan Tharaka, a social media activist, tells the BBC.
“We reactivated the group as soon as we heard what was happening last Thursday,” he says.
A flurry of activity is also happening online, where social media users have created a public database to direct donations and volunteers. Private companies have organised donation drives, while local television channels have launched an effort to provide food and basic necessities.
Facing criticism over his handling of preparations for Cyclone Ditwah, President Dissanayake has urged Sri Lankans to set aside all political differences and come together to rebuild the nation. On the ground, though, there remains a sense of unity as Sri Lankans pick up the pieces after the floods.
“In the end, the joy of helping someone else to save lives makes that tiredness fade,” Mr Sahan wrote in a Facebook post. “Disasters are not new to us. But, the empathy and capacity of our hearts is greater than the destruction that occurs during a disaster.”


















