The Biggest Bitcoin Pizza Day Celebration Ever

Bitcoin Magazine
The Biggest Bitcoin Pizza Day Celebration Ever
How did 115 orphaned children end up on their first bus ride to a zoo to celebrate a real-world Bitcoin transaction 15 years ago? It’s a question I found myself asking in disbelief as I coordinated their entrance at the Uganda Wildlife Education Centre — commonly known as the Entebbe Zoo — on Bitcoin Pizza Day, May 22. The morning sun was warm, and the air buzzed with excitement and laughter. Children who had rarely strayed beyond their rural village in Bugiri, Uganda, were now getting off buses, eyes wide at the expectation of giraffes and elephants. Many of these kids had never even heard of a zoo before, let alone seen one. Yet here they were, grinning ear to ear after breakfast, ready to celebrate a quirky Bitcoin holiday. How on Earth did we get here?
As I watched those 115 children — children from the Orphans of Uganda Children Center — marvel at animals and enjoy their very first pizza party later that afternoon, I felt a swell of emotions in my chest. I saw joy, wonder, and a sense of belonging wash over kids who have known too much hardship in their young lives. For me, this wasn’t just a fun day out. It was the culmination of an incredible journey of hope, community, and innovation. Bitcoin Pizza Day commemorates the first real-world Bitcoin transaction when, back in 2010, Lazlo famously bought two pizzas for 10,000 BTC. For most Bitcoiners, it’s a lighthearted celebration. But for us in Uganda this year, Pizza Day became something deeply personal — a day when an internet myth reached into our world and made a real difference. Bitcoin paid for those pizzas the children ate, yes. But it also paid for the buses, the zoo tickets, and the chance for these orphans to leave their district for the first time in their lives. It was, in every sense, the biggest Bitcoin Pizza Day celebration ever seen.
The Road to Bitcoin Pizza Day
Standing in that zoo, I couldn’t help but reflect on the road that led us here. Just months before this event, our team, led by Orphanage Director Isma, achieved something I once thought nearly impossible. Feeding over a hundred children has always been our largest expense here at the orphanage, and for the past years, we’ve been experimenting with a new idea: What if we could do it all with bitcoin? Sat by sat, we were building a small Bitcoin economy around the orphanage. In fact, by consistently honoring our commitments and showing the usefulness of this strange digital money, we even earned the trust of our most important supplier. I’m proud to say that our loyal food supplier, the woman who sells us bulk maize, beans, and other staples, now accepts bitcoin as payment. That was a big win for us. It meant we could buy food for the kids directly with the sats donated by generous Bitcoiners worldwide, without always having to convert to cash. It meant our bitcoin could stay bitcoin from donor to dinner, closing the loop in our little circular economy.
That achievement didn’t happen overnight. It was the result of months of education and relationship-building in our community. We knew that to really help these children long term, we needed more than one-off donations; we needed sustainability. So we set out ambitious goals for ourselves: make the orphanage self-sustaining and integrate bitcoin into daily life in Bugiri.
We brainstormed ideas like starting a poultry farm for eggs to improve the children’s nutrition and generate income, or acquiring sewing machines so the older kids could learn tailoring skills, thanks to Bitcoin Dada ladies in Uganda. Each initiative was aimed at empowering the orphans with tools and knowledge to eventually take care of themselves. And woven through all these plans was Bitcoin, the monetary network that allowed a global community of supporters to be part of our local solutions. We wanted the shopkeepers, market vendors, and school teachers in our town to see the same potential we saw. If more of our neighbors would trade in bitcoin — if they could save it, spend it, and trust it — then the orphanage’s lifeline wouldn’t depend solely on distant donors. It would be rooted in the community, powered by the people and businesses right here at home. Little by little, that’s exactly what is happening. Our Bitcoin Kampala project has doubled down on outreach in the village, showing anyone who listens how to download a Bitcoin wallet, how to make a Lightning payment, and why this technology isn’t just “internet money” but something that can change their lives. One by one, new allies are coming on board. Our food vendor was one; a local clinic that treats our kids became another; the local engineering company joined the freedom train, too. The circle of trust in Bitcoin is widening.
My own trust in Bitcoin had been cemented by one particularly urgent moment. I’ll never forget the day I truly saw the power of this technology again beyond my personal life. One morning not long ago, the orphanage’s food store was empty — we had no food left to cook for the children’s lunch. The usual funding we relied on was delayed, and local stores wouldn’t give us any more on credit. In desperation, Isma and I reached out to a friend in South America. I told him about our situation, and he didn’t hesitate. He sent a $60 bitcoin donation across the world to Isma immediately. Within seconds, the transaction popped up on Isma’s phone — confirmed. He walked into our now Bitcoin food vendor’s shop that very morning, showed the shopkeeper the bitcoin his wallet, and he worked out a quick exchange in order to pay for just enough maize and beans for lunch. By 1:00 p.m., the children were eating a hot meal. There were no banks involved, no remittance offices open (it was a Sunday, after all), no waiting until the next day for funds to clear. Just hungry kids at an orphanage in Uganda and a caring friend in South America connected by this borderless money. That day, bitcoin literally put food on empty plates in the nick of time. I often think back to how miraculous it felt. For the first time, I had a tool that could summon help from anywhere on the planet, just when we needed it the most.
In fact, the very first bitcoin donations I’d ever received personally had gotten me to the biggest Bitcoin conference in Europe within a month; still, this lunch meal paid instantly was way more amazing than anything I’d ever known about Bitcoin. From day one, Bitcoin proved its worth to me not in theory, but in person: Hungry children eat because of it?! After that, I was convinced that this technology was more than just an idea for rich investors or tech enthusiasts. It was a lifeline for the forgotten ones in society — like our kids out in Bugiri, many of whom had been orphaned by disease or tragedy and had nobody but us to care for them. Bitcoin was helping us keep them alive and healthy.
It still amazes me how an unlikely series of events brought us to this point. Truth be told, I never set out deliberately to be part of a “Bitcoin orphanage project” until a Machankura Ugandan representative named Satstacker connected me with the orphanage. A couple of years ago, I was just a Bitcoiner in Kampala, running a little educational meetup under the moniker Gorilla Sats. I was inspired by places like El Zonte in El Salvador (the famous “Bitcoin Beach”) and similar projects in South Africa and Brazil. My goal after attending BTC Prague in 2023 was to spark a Bitcoin circular economy somewhere in Uganda — anywhere. Who knew it would end up being in a rural orphanage?
Originally, I thought Makerere University students might lead the way — or entrepreneurs. I hosted talks, met fellow enthusiasts, and dreamed big. But fate complemented all the above efforts in the form of a Twitter contact: I learned about this orphanage out in the Bugiri district that was struggling, and Isma, the caretaker, was curious about Bitcoin. These were genuine, honest people doing good work with almost no resources. They had heard that Bitcoin might help them receive donations more easily. So we connected. I taught them what I knew, helped set up a Lightning wallet, taught them self-custody, and shared their story online. What happened next was beyond my expectations. Bitcoiners from around the world — people we’d never met — started sending support. What started as a trickle of sats soon grew into a stream of love and generosity from every corner of the globe. And the orphanage and now school staff, in turn, began to fully embrace this new tool. They learned to secure seed phrases, make payments, and keep records. They became proud members of the Bitcoin community. In the process, 113 children (now 115) inadvertently became some of the youngest participants in a global Bitcoin economy. Not because anyone forced them to, but because it simply worked for them. In a way, these kids accidentally demonstrated what voluntary Bitcoin adoption looks like at its purest. They had a need; Bitcoin filled it. It was as simple as that.
Africa Needs Bitcoin, and Bitcoin Needs Africa
Moments like the zoo trip put into perspective why all of this matters. We often say that Bitcoin solves real problems in Africa — things like costly remittances, lack of banking access, corruption, and currency instability. I have seen that truth with my own eyes. Here in Uganda, if you don’t have a national ID to get access to mobile money or if you live far from a bank branch, the traditional financial system shuts you out. But with nothing more than a feature phone (via Machankura) and an internet connection (if on a smartphone), Bitcoin lets anyone participate in the economy. Donations that would have taken days and hefty fees to arrive via wire transfer now reach us in minutes with pennies in fees. When we need construction works, medical supplies, school fees, or food, Bitcoin is often the fastest and most transparent way to get funds and pay for it. Africa needs Bitcoin because it can leapfrog a lot of the infrastructural challenges that have held us back. It puts power directly in the hands of the people who need it — whether it’s an orphanage in Uganda, refugees in a camp who can’t open bank accounts, or a women’s savings group looking for a way to store their hard-earned savings. It provides an alternative when local currencies collapse or when inflation eats away at savings. It creates the possibility for a more level financial playing field.
But the other side of this story is something I’ve come to believe just as strongly: Bitcoin needs Africa. It needs the energy, the stories, and the real-world use cases that our communities provide — in places like Uganda, Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, and beyond, Bitcoin isn’t just an investment toy or a speculative asset — it’s a tool of survival and empowerment. We are stress-testing Bitcoin in the most human ways. We’re finding out how it can feed children, fund education, and build businesses from the ground up. By doing so, we are giving Bitcoin a purpose far greater than price charts and inflation hedges. We’re imbuing it with our values of community and solidarity. A friend of mine, Fernando from the Praia Bitcoin project in Brazil, who has mentored me greatly, told me something that has stuck in my mind. Seeing our work with the orphanage since 2023, he said:
“This is the most successful usage of Bitcoin so far. It’s starting the peaceful revolution with over 100 forgotten ones.”
Coming from someone halfway across the world, who’s also fighting to spread Bitcoin for social good, that meant a lot. It reminded me that what we’re doing in this little corner of Uganda is part of a much larger story — a peaceful revolution uniting those whom the old financial system left behind.
Back at the zoo, I felt that revolution in my bones. I saw it in the way the Kampala Bitcoin community members showed up en masse to support these kids — many volunteers traveled hours to be there, paying their own way just to share in this joy. I saw it in how eagerly the children shared pizza slices with our guests, as if to say thank you for being there. At that moment, any barriers between “rich Bitcoiners,” if there were any in attendance, and “poor orphans” melted away; we were just people together, celebrating hope and possibility. By the end of the day, we had gathered over 160 people to celebrate and I knew this was a story worth telling far beyond our borders. On Twitter, we’ve been documenting our journey from the start, and I’m thrilled to share that a short documentary of this Bitcoin Pizza Day at the zoo is coming. It will capture the smiles, the songs the children sang, their experience on the bus, and the sheer amazement on their faces meeting wildlife for the first time. I invite you to follow Bitcoin Kampala on X (Twitter), on YouTube, and even on Nostr, so you can see when the short film is released and stay updated on our next chapters.
The buses have long since left the zoo, carrying the children back to Bugiri, but the impact of that day still lingers in our hearts. I’m writing this back in Kampala, reflecting on how far we’ve come. It’s hard to believe that a simple idea — using bitcoin to help those in need — would snowball into a community and movement that’s changing lives. I think about the future a lot — about those kids and what opportunities we can create for them as they grow up. There’s so much more to do. We want to build them a Bitcoin school where they can feel safe and loved while acquiring multiple life skills and learning about Bitcoin. We want to expand our little Bitcoin economy so that by the time these children are young adults, they’ll have a thriving local market to participate in, one that understands and accepts the money of the future. We want to show more people across Africa what is possible when Bitcoin meets compassion.
As I wrap up my thoughts, I return to that opening question and realize it isn’t so impossible after all. How did 115 orphaned children end up on a bus to the zoo on Bitcoin Pizza Day? They did it because hundreds of people — from Uganda to South America to Europe and beyond — decided to care. They did it because a decentralized network allowed those caring people to coordinate and contribute instantaneously. They did it because when Bitcoin is guided by heart, it can achieve truly beautiful things. This experience has left me deeply hopeful. If a handful of Bitcoin enthusiasts and a struggling orphanage can join forces to accidentally spark a “peaceful revolution” for over a hundred forgotten children, then what else is possible? The mission we’re on is bigger than bitcoin’s price or any buzzwords; it’s about human dignity and connection.
Bitcoin has given all of us, but especially these children, a chance at a better life. It’s given me a renewed purpose. In turn, these children have given Bitcoin a story that cuts through the noise and gets to its true essence. I believe that story is only just beginning. After all, as we like to say in our Bitcoin in Africa Monthly Twitter Space: Africa needs Bitcoin, and Bitcoin needs Africa.
Subscribe now to get your annual Bitcoin Magazine Subscription!
This piece is an article featured in the latest Print edition of Bitcoin Magazine, The Lightning Issue. We’re sharing it here to show the ideas explored throughout the full issue.
This post The Biggest Bitcoin Pizza Day Celebration Ever first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Shinobi and Brindon Mwiine.
The Biggest Bitcoin Pizza Day Celebration Ever

Bitcoin Magazine
The Biggest Bitcoin Pizza Day Celebration Ever
How did 115 orphaned children end up on their first bus ride to a zoo to celebrate a real-world Bitcoin transaction 15 years ago? It’s a question I found myself asking in disbelief as I coordinated their entrance at the Uganda Wildlife Education Centre — commonly known as the Entebbe Zoo — on Bitcoin Pizza Day, May 22. The morning sun was warm, and the air buzzed with excitement and laughter. Children who had rarely strayed beyond their rural village in Bugiri, Uganda, were now getting off buses, eyes wide at the expectation of giraffes and elephants. Many of these kids had never even heard of a zoo before, let alone seen one. Yet here they were, grinning ear to ear after breakfast, ready to celebrate a quirky Bitcoin holiday. How on Earth did we get here?
As I watched those 115 children — children from the Orphans of Uganda Children Center — marvel at animals and enjoy their very first pizza party later that afternoon, I felt a swell of emotions in my chest. I saw joy, wonder, and a sense of belonging wash over kids who have known too much hardship in their young lives. For me, this wasn’t just a fun day out. It was the culmination of an incredible journey of hope, community, and innovation. Bitcoin Pizza Day commemorates the first real-world Bitcoin transaction when, back in 2010, Lazlo famously bought two pizzas for 10,000 BTC. For most Bitcoiners, it’s a lighthearted celebration. But for us in Uganda this year, Pizza Day became something deeply personal — a day when an internet myth reached into our world and made a real difference. Bitcoin paid for those pizzas the children ate, yes. But it also paid for the buses, the zoo tickets, and the chance for these orphans to leave their district for the first time in their lives. It was, in every sense, the biggest Bitcoin Pizza Day celebration ever seen.
The Road to Bitcoin Pizza Day
Standing in that zoo, I couldn’t help but reflect on the road that led us here. Just months before this event, our team, led by Orphanage Director Isma, achieved something I once thought nearly impossible. Feeding over a hundred children has always been our largest expense here at the orphanage, and for the past years, we’ve been experimenting with a new idea: What if we could do it all with bitcoin? Sat by sat, we were building a small Bitcoin economy around the orphanage. In fact, by consistently honoring our commitments and showing the usefulness of this strange digital money, we even earned the trust of our most important supplier. I’m proud to say that our loyal food supplier, the woman who sells us bulk maize, beans, and other staples, now accepts bitcoin as payment. That was a big win for us. It meant we could buy food for the kids directly with the sats donated by generous Bitcoiners worldwide, without always having to convert to cash. It meant our bitcoin could stay bitcoin from donor to dinner, closing the loop in our little circular economy.
That achievement didn’t happen overnight. It was the result of months of education and relationship-building in our community. We knew that to really help these children long term, we needed more than one-off donations; we needed sustainability. So we set out ambitious goals for ourselves: make the orphanage self-sustaining and integrate bitcoin into daily life in Bugiri.
We brainstormed ideas like starting a poultry farm for eggs to improve the children’s nutrition and generate income, or acquiring sewing machines so the older kids could learn tailoring skills, thanks to Bitcoin Dada ladies in Uganda. Each initiative was aimed at empowering the orphans with tools and knowledge to eventually take care of themselves. And woven through all these plans was Bitcoin, the monetary network that allowed a global community of supporters to be part of our local solutions. We wanted the shopkeepers, market vendors, and school teachers in our town to see the same potential we saw. If more of our neighbors would trade in bitcoin — if they could save it, spend it, and trust it — then the orphanage’s lifeline wouldn’t depend solely on distant donors. It would be rooted in the community, powered by the people and businesses right here at home. Little by little, that’s exactly what is happening. Our Bitcoin Kampala project has doubled down on outreach in the village, showing anyone who listens how to download a Bitcoin wallet, how to make a Lightning payment, and why this technology isn’t just “internet money” but something that can change their lives. One by one, new allies are coming on board. Our food vendor was one; a local clinic that treats our kids became another; the local engineering company joined the freedom train, too. The circle of trust in Bitcoin is widening.
My own trust in Bitcoin had been cemented by one particularly urgent moment. I’ll never forget the day I truly saw the power of this technology again beyond my personal life. One morning not long ago, the orphanage’s food store was empty — we had no food left to cook for the children’s lunch. The usual funding we relied on was delayed, and local stores wouldn’t give us any more on credit. In desperation, Isma and I reached out to a friend in South America. I told him about our situation, and he didn’t hesitate. He sent a $60 bitcoin donation across the world to Isma immediately. Within seconds, the transaction popped up on Isma’s phone — confirmed. He walked into our now Bitcoin food vendor’s shop that very morning, showed the shopkeeper the bitcoin his wallet, and he worked out a quick exchange in order to pay for just enough maize and beans for lunch. By 1:00 p.m., the children were eating a hot meal. There were no banks involved, no remittance offices open (it was a Sunday, after all), no waiting until the next day for funds to clear. Just hungry kids at an orphanage in Uganda and a caring friend in South America connected by this borderless money. That day, bitcoin literally put food on empty plates in the nick of time. I often think back to how miraculous it felt. For the first time, I had a tool that could summon help from anywhere on the planet, just when we needed it the most.
In fact, the very first bitcoin donations I’d ever received personally had gotten me to the biggest Bitcoin conference in Europe within a month; still, this lunch meal paid instantly was way more amazing than anything I’d ever known about Bitcoin. From day one, Bitcoin proved its worth to me not in theory, but in person: Hungry children eat because of it?! After that, I was convinced that this technology was more than just an idea for rich investors or tech enthusiasts. It was a lifeline for the forgotten ones in society — like our kids out in Bugiri, many of whom had been orphaned by disease or tragedy and had nobody but us to care for them. Bitcoin was helping us keep them alive and healthy.
It still amazes me how an unlikely series of events brought us to this point. Truth be told, I never set out deliberately to be part of a “Bitcoin orphanage project” until a Machankura Ugandan representative named Satstacker connected me with the orphanage. A couple of years ago, I was just a Bitcoiner in Kampala, running a little educational meetup under the moniker Gorilla Sats. I was inspired by places like El Zonte in El Salvador (the famous “Bitcoin Beach”) and similar projects in South Africa and Brazil. My goal after attending BTC Prague in 2023 was to spark a Bitcoin circular economy somewhere in Uganda — anywhere. Who knew it would end up being in a rural orphanage?
Originally, I thought Makerere University students might lead the way — or entrepreneurs. I hosted talks, met fellow enthusiasts, and dreamed big. But fate complemented all the above efforts in the form of a Twitter contact: I learned about this orphanage out in the Bugiri district that was struggling, and Isma, the caretaker, was curious about Bitcoin. These were genuine, honest people doing good work with almost no resources. They had heard that Bitcoin might help them receive donations more easily. So we connected. I taught them what I knew, helped set up a Lightning wallet, taught them self-custody, and shared their story online. What happened next was beyond my expectations. Bitcoiners from around the world — people we’d never met — started sending support. What started as a trickle of sats soon grew into a stream of love and generosity from every corner of the globe. And the orphanage and now school staff, in turn, began to fully embrace this new tool. They learned to secure seed phrases, make payments, and keep records. They became proud members of the Bitcoin community. In the process, 113 children (now 115) inadvertently became some of the youngest participants in a global Bitcoin economy. Not because anyone forced them to, but because it simply worked for them. In a way, these kids accidentally demonstrated what voluntary Bitcoin adoption looks like at its purest. They had a need; Bitcoin filled it. It was as simple as that.
Africa Needs Bitcoin, and Bitcoin Needs Africa
Moments like the zoo trip put into perspective why all of this matters. We often say that Bitcoin solves real problems in Africa — things like costly remittances, lack of banking access, corruption, and currency instability. I have seen that truth with my own eyes. Here in Uganda, if you don’t have a national ID to get access to mobile money or if you live far from a bank branch, the traditional financial system shuts you out. But with nothing more than a feature phone (via Machankura) and an internet connection (if on a smartphone), Bitcoin lets anyone participate in the economy. Donations that would have taken days and hefty fees to arrive via wire transfer now reach us in minutes with pennies in fees. When we need construction works, medical supplies, school fees, or food, Bitcoin is often the fastest and most transparent way to get funds and pay for it. Africa needs Bitcoin because it can leapfrog a lot of the infrastructural challenges that have held us back. It puts power directly in the hands of the people who need it — whether it’s an orphanage in Uganda, refugees in a camp who can’t open bank accounts, or a women’s savings group looking for a way to store their hard-earned savings. It provides an alternative when local currencies collapse or when inflation eats away at savings. It creates the possibility for a more level financial playing field.
But the other side of this story is something I’ve come to believe just as strongly: Bitcoin needs Africa. It needs the energy, the stories, and the real-world use cases that our communities provide — in places like Uganda, Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, and beyond, Bitcoin isn’t just an investment toy or a speculative asset — it’s a tool of survival and empowerment. We are stress-testing Bitcoin in the most human ways. We’re finding out how it can feed children, fund education, and build businesses from the ground up. By doing so, we are giving Bitcoin a purpose far greater than price charts and inflation hedges. We’re imbuing it with our values of community and solidarity. A friend of mine, Fernando from the Praia Bitcoin project in Brazil, who has mentored me greatly, told me something that has stuck in my mind. Seeing our work with the orphanage since 2023, he said:
“This is the most successful usage of Bitcoin so far. It’s starting the peaceful revolution with over 100 forgotten ones.”
Coming from someone halfway across the world, who’s also fighting to spread Bitcoin for social good, that meant a lot. It reminded me that what we’re doing in this little corner of Uganda is part of a much larger story — a peaceful revolution uniting those whom the old financial system left behind.
Back at the zoo, I felt that revolution in my bones. I saw it in the way the Kampala Bitcoin community members showed up en masse to support these kids — many volunteers traveled hours to be there, paying their own way just to share in this joy. I saw it in how eagerly the children shared pizza slices with our guests, as if to say thank you for being there. At that moment, any barriers between “rich Bitcoiners,” if there were any in attendance, and “poor orphans” melted away; we were just people together, celebrating hope and possibility. By the end of the day, we had gathered over 160 people to celebrate and I knew this was a story worth telling far beyond our borders. On Twitter, we’ve been documenting our journey from the start, and I’m thrilled to share that a short documentary of this Bitcoin Pizza Day at the zoo is coming. It will capture the smiles, the songs the children sang, their experience on the bus, and the sheer amazement on their faces meeting wildlife for the first time. I invite you to follow Bitcoin Kampala on X (Twitter), on YouTube, and even on Nostr, so you can see when the short film is released and stay updated on our next chapters.
The buses have long since left the zoo, carrying the children back to Bugiri, but the impact of that day still lingers in our hearts. I’m writing this back in Kampala, reflecting on how far we’ve come. It’s hard to believe that a simple idea — using bitcoin to help those in need — would snowball into a community and movement that’s changing lives. I think about the future a lot — about those kids and what opportunities we can create for them as they grow up. There’s so much more to do. We want to build them a Bitcoin school where they can feel safe and loved while acquiring multiple life skills and learning about Bitcoin. We want to expand our little Bitcoin economy so that by the time these children are young adults, they’ll have a thriving local market to participate in, one that understands and accepts the money of the future. We want to show more people across Africa what is possible when Bitcoin meets compassion.
As I wrap up my thoughts, I return to that opening question and realize it isn’t so impossible after all. How did 115 orphaned children end up on a bus to the zoo on Bitcoin Pizza Day? They did it because hundreds of people — from Uganda to South America to Europe and beyond — decided to care. They did it because a decentralized network allowed those caring people to coordinate and contribute instantaneously. They did it because when Bitcoin is guided by heart, it can achieve truly beautiful things. This experience has left me deeply hopeful. If a handful of Bitcoin enthusiasts and a struggling orphanage can join forces to accidentally spark a “peaceful revolution” for over a hundred forgotten children, then what else is possible? The mission we’re on is bigger than bitcoin’s price or any buzzwords; it’s about human dignity and connection.
Bitcoin has given all of us, but especially these children, a chance at a better life. It’s given me a renewed purpose. In turn, these children have given Bitcoin a story that cuts through the noise and gets to its true essence. I believe that story is only just beginning. After all, as we like to say in our Bitcoin in Africa Monthly Twitter Space: Africa needs Bitcoin, and Bitcoin needs Africa.
Subscribe now to get your annual Bitcoin Magazine Subscription!
This piece is an article featured in the latest Print edition of Bitcoin Magazine, The Lightning Issue. We’re sharing it here to show the ideas explored throughout the full issue.
This post The Biggest Bitcoin Pizza Day Celebration Ever first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Shinobi and Brindon Mwiine.