Mukta Begum cries yesterday after losing her husband of only three months.
Emergency appeal from Red Cross
Volunteers prepare a mass burial in Nisanbari, on the south coast of Bangladesh, on Sunday as a relative of a storm victim looks on.
I've been waiting here for several hours hoping to get some food and drinking water, but I'm not sure it will come
- Safura Begum, survivor
Thousands are dead. Those that actually survived the deadly storm that ripped through Bangladesh are left homeless. These people are just poor fishermen and farmers and as Mother Nature tore through their country, they are left with nothing.
Watch these videos and try to feel what these poor people are going through. Once you have seen the dramatic fashion that the level 4 cyclone left the country of Bangladesh, you will have a better idea of the hardship that these people are dealing with.
We all need to come forward. We all need to help out. Don’t allow this story to be swept under the rug. Tell everyone you know about what is going on in the world right now. They need your help.
A mother with tearful eyes stares at the Bay of Bengal at Roshangiri in Banshkhali, Chittagong, yesterday hoping her missing son will return. Her son went fishing near Dublarchar in Bagherhat before the storm.
(Struggling to survive)



(Survivor Monira)
"Waters sprang up atop the trees. We don't know how come we are alive,” said Monira. A housewife from Southkhali village, she does not care about relief. She does not go around telling everyone how badly her family has been ravaged by Thursday's storm. She just stares blankly at the people visiting their village.
Still numb with grief of losing a son, she seemed to have trouble speaking. But she let it all out when this correspondent asked her what it was like during the monster cyclone.