Bricks for Minds Foundation

Brick by brick, opening futures.

From a suitcase of pencils to a school of our own. Supplies today, schools tomorrow.

Hands-on, from a backpack to a school.

Small gifts become school supplies I buy and deliver myself; larger gifts support vulnerable children and help us build a school.

How we make a difference

Three ways we work

01

Supply

Delivering school supplies by hand, pens, pencils, books and the basics, straight to the children who need them.

02

Support

Standing behind orphanages and schools with practical, ongoing financial help that reaches children directly.

03

School

Helping build one of our own in Rwanda, a lasting model to repeat elsewhere in Africa.

Current focus

Our current focus: MOCO

Kilimanjaro, Tanzania

Direct, ongoing support for 262 vulnerable children at MOCO.

Transparency

What your support can help fund

Simple, visible and accountable, from the need identified, to the support raised, to the progress delivered on the ground.

$35/month

Sponsors one child at MOCO.

$900

A full supply run, hand-delivered to a school in Africa, wherever work travel takes us.

$2,500

Supports one teacher for a year.

Get involved

Help us build the next brick

Whether you donate, sponsor a project, introduce a partner or support through your company, every contribution helps create better learning opportunities for children.

Our mission

Talent is everywhere, but opportunity is not.

Bricks for Minds Foundation exists to support children in Africa by delivering school supplies, backing orphanages and schools, and funding practical, community-based projects.

Why education

Education creates long-term impact

It is one of the few investments that compounds across a lifetime, and across a community.

  • Confidence
  • Safety
  • Employability
  • Dignity
  • Community resilience
  • Leadership
  • Future opportunity
  • Access
Why Africa

Grounded in real exposure

My professional work in commercial real estate, covering complex and emerging markets, has taken me across 20 countries in Africa so far, delivering projects for corporate clients. Over those years I started building real relationships, spending time in communities and seeing the inequality first-hand, until I wanted to do more than just work here.

Africa is not one story. I respect the diversity of its countries, cultures, cities and communities, and Bricks for Minds grew out of everything I saw on the ground, the challenges and the extraordinary potential alike.

Filip RerkoFounder, Bricks for Minds Foundation

Meet the founder

Hands-on, not at a distance

I started Bricks for Minds to do something practical with everything those years on the continent showed me. On every trip I hand-deliver school supplies to a school chosen with local partners, and I give direct, ongoing support to MOCO, a home and school for 262 vulnerable children.

Because my field is commercial real estate, when it comes to building or expanding a school I can weigh the site, the build and its long-term running costs with a professional eye, and steer the funds raised toward what stands up both commercially and financially.

There’s no middle layer and no distance, just support I can see reaching children myself, with the longer-term vision of helping build schools.

How we work

Practical, transparent, locally connected

Identify real needs

Through trusted local relationships, not assumptions from a distance.

Select focused projects

Achievable initiatives with a clear, visible outcome.

Fund specific outcomes

Defined items, milestones or results, not vague overheads.

Share progress

Visually and transparently, so supporters see the impact.

What we support

Where support goes

School supplies & materialsClassroom equipmentOrphanage & school support ScholarshipsChildren's community projectsLocal education partners Girls' educationA future school (long-term)

Transparency & governance

Accountable by design

We keep the structure deliberately simple, so every supporter, individual or corporate, can see exactly where their money goes and how it is governed.

Direct

Funds are held and controlled by the foundation and reach the field without middlemen.

~86%

of every gift goes to programs; under 15% covers running costs and payment fees.

Registration & oversight Registered in the Czech Republic as Bricks for Minds Foundation, nadační fond (an endowment fund), company ID (IČO) 29564417. Registered seat: Slavíčkova 372/2, Bubeneč, 160 00 Prague 6. The full filing, including the board, is openly available in the public foundation register. View the official registry record (ARES) →

Each year we publish a short summary of what came in, what went out, and what it delivered.

Projects

Three projects, run with local partners.

What the foundation is doing, and preparing to do. Every project is simple, visible and accountable.

How we help

Three ways the foundation helps

OngoingAcross Africa

School supply runs

Two bags, around 50kg of supplies, packed by hand and delivered straight to a school chosen with local partners.

$900 funds one full supply run.

ActiveKilimanjaro, Tanzania

MOCO: direct, ongoing support

Direct, ongoing support for MOCO, a registered home and school for 262 vulnerable children in Kilimanjaro.

$35/month sponsors one child.

Long-termOutside Kigali

A school of our own

Helping expand an established school outside Kigali into a place for around 600 girls, with the Catholic Church who hold the land. Early-stage, dependent on funding.

Every gift brings it closer.

How giving works

Simple, visible, accountable

A defined item

Every gift funds something specific, a supply run, a child’s month, a piece of the build, never a general pot.

Photos and receipts

You see exactly where it landed, with images and documentation sent back from the ground after each delivery.

Low overhead

Costs are kept lean; on monthly MOCO sponsorship, for example, around 86% reaches the school directly.

Get involved

Help pack the next run

Every contribution goes towards supplies for the next trip, ongoing support for MOCO, and the long-term goal of a school of our own. However you help, you become part of it.

Support us

Back the work, directly.

Every contribution helps us move from good intentions to practical impact: a child’s school year, a suitcase of supplies, a classroom that gets built.

Three ways to help

Where your support goes

Every trip

Fund a supply run

Across Africa

When you fund a supply run, I buy around 50 kg of school supplies, which is about the limit most airlines allow as checked baggage, and carry them out by hand on my next work trip, then deliver them straight to a local school or orphanage chosen with partners on the ground. Runs travel with me on scheduled work trips, so delivery follows my travel calendar.

$900 buys and hand-delivers one full run, two bags, around 50 kg of supplies.
See what a run can include

Learning: pens, pencils, crayons, notebooks, rulers, chalk, geometry sets, compasses, whiteboard markers, erasers & sharpeners, educational and story books, dictionaries, laminated wall maps and charts, flash cards, solar calculators and reusable mini whiteboards.

Play & sport: footballs with a pump, skipping ropes, frisbees, cones, inflatable globes, board games, puzzles and simple instruments like recorders.

Health & everyday: reading glasses, solar-powered study lamps, durable backpacks and reusable water bottles.

Donate a supply run See the runs
Active

Support MOCO School

Kilimanjaro, Tanzania

A registered home, orphanage and pre- & primary school for 262 vulnerable children, free education, boarding, three meals a day and medical care. We support MOCO directly, with help that reaches the children.

$100 books & supplies for 5 children $420 a child’s full year of care
Donate to MOCO See the MOCO project
Long-term

Build a school for 600 girls

Rwanda

Our long-term ambition: helping build a school for 600 girls in Rwanda, a safe, future-focused place to learn. This is a potential future project, dependent on the funding and partnerships to make it real. School gifts receive progress updates at every milestone: the agreement, the study, the build.

Every gift counts, whatever the size.
Donate to the school See the school project

Every gift comes with photos and receipts once it’s delivered, so you see exactly where it went.

Make your gift

Give in a minute

One-off or monthly, in your currency. Card, Apple Pay or Google Pay.

Make MOCO self-sufficient

Donate

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Tax-deductible giving. Gifts to the foundation may be tax-deductible for Czech taxpayers, and may also be deductible for donors elsewhere in the EU/EEA under their local rules. We’ll send a donation confirmation (potvrzení o daru) for every gift. If you’d like a formal donation agreement (darovací smlouva), useful especially for companies or larger gifts, email us at [email protected] and we’ll arrange it.

Can I cancel a monthly gift anytime?
Yes, one email or one click, no questions asked.
How much reaches the school?
On MOCO sponsorship, around 86% goes directly to the school; the rest covers payment fees and the foundation’s lean running costs.
When will I see photos from my gift?
Supply runs come back as photos and receipts after the delivery trip. MOCO gifts are reported with photos from the school. School-project gifts receive progress updates at each milestone, since building hasn’t started yet.
Will I get a tax receipt?
Yes, a donation confirmation (potvrzení o daru) for every gift, sent for your tax return.
What if the school build doesn’t go ahead?
School gifts are held for the build; if it doesn’t proceed, they go to children’s education through our other projects.
Who is behind the foundation?
Filip Rerko, founder. Bricks for Minds is a registered Czech nadační fond (IČO 29564417). Read the story on the Mission page, or check the public registry (ARES).
Partner with us

For companies & major donors

Larger gifts and corporate partnerships let us do more, faster, and we make them easy to justify, report and recognise.

Sponsor children at team scale: 10 children for $350/month, or fund a defined build: a kitchen, a dormitory, a school bus. Partners receive photo reports, a donation agreement (darovací smlouva) and simple invoicing.

Get in touch

Let's talk

You can support Bricks for Minds Foundation as an individual donor, corporate sponsor, project partner, or simply by opening the right door.

Questions, partnerships, or arranging a larger or corporate gift? Send a message and we’ll be in touch directly.

Prefer email? Reach us directly at [email protected].

Project · Active

MOCO Pre & Primary School

“We Raise, We Teach, We Serve.” A registered home and school for 262 vulnerable children in Kilimanjaro, Tanzania.

A short visit to MOCO, Kilimanjaro, Tanzania.

About the school

More than a school, a home

MOCO is a registered NGO school (EM 21210) serving 262 orphans, children with disabilities and children from extremely poor families, from Pre-Primary to Standard VII.

It provides free education, boarding, three meals a day, medical care, uniforms and learning materials, run by a team of 29: teachers, matrons, cooks, guards and a driver.

One story

Bryson

Bryson was three when he suffered a severe leg fracture. In the community, an injury like that often means a child is left behind, because families cannot afford professional medical care.

Thanks to a donor, he got the care he needed and made a full recovery. These days, he smiles a lot more.

A small story, but the real one: the difference between being reached and being left behind.

The need

Why support matters now

  • 98 pupils walk 5–12 km to reach school each day.
  • 110 boarders sleep in two overcrowded classrooms, there is no dormitory.
  • Meals are cooked over three stones and eaten outside, even in the rain.
  • Teachers have gone unpaid for four months and are at risk of leaving.
Monthly sponsorship

Sustain a child, month by month

Make MOCO self-sufficient

MOCO runs on about 75,000 TZS, roughly $30, per child each month, covering meals, clean water, school supplies, utilities and a contribution toward teacher salaries. A standing gift of $35 a month fully sponsors one child, and around 260 monthly sponsors keep the whole school running.

Every $35 sends $30 straight to MOCO; the remaining ~$5 (about 14%) covers the foundation’s running costs and payment fees.

One-time gifts

Build something lasting

Beyond the monthly running costs, one-time gifts keep teachers in classrooms and fund the facilities MOCO is still missing.

$2,500

Supports one teacher for a year.

$86,000

A 30-seat school bus, safe transport for ~150 pupils.

$153,000

A modern kitchen and dining hall for 300.

$183,000

A 200-bed dormitory with bathrooms and solar.

Monthly sponsorship keeps the school running day to day; the one-time builds above are separate capital projects. Including those builds, MOCO’s full appeal comes to around $610,000. Every gift, at any level, goes toward a defined item.
Be part of it

Sponsor a child at MOCO

$35 a month fully sponsors one child: meals, clean water, supplies and a share of teachers’ pay. Around 260 monthly sponsors keep the whole school running.

Long-term vision · In early discussion

A school for 600 girls, outside Kigali.

Our most ambitious hope: helping turn an established school on the edge of Kigali into a place that can educate 600 girls. It is early, and nothing is yet agreed, but the vision is real, and it belongs to people already doing the work.

The visit

Where it began

In December 2025 I visited an established school just outside Kigali. The land and buildings belong to the Archdiocese of Kigali, which has supported this community for years.

Walking the site, it was easy to see both what is already there and what it could become with the right support behind it.

Their vision, in their words

“You educate girls, you educate the country.”

The vision

From an existing school to a future for 600 girls

The plan is not to start from nothing, but to expand what already stands: growing the current facilities into a school built around the education of 600 girls.

Because my background is in commercial real estate, I can weigh the things that decide whether a project like this works, the site, the design, the build cost and the running costs once it opens, and steer the funds raised toward what is genuinely viable and built to last.

I am in early conversations with the Church about this, through a separate project where we are already working together. If those talks grow into something firm, the foundation hopes to help make the expansion possible.

The plan

A real site, a real plan

A local architect has already drawn up the scope: new classrooms and a library, a dining hall and kitchen, and dormitories, set among the existing buildings on the hill.

Architect’s renders of the proposed expansion. Swipe to explore.
Master plan of the expansion, scale 1:500
Master plan, scale 1:500: classrooms & library, dining & kitchen and girls’ and boys’ dormitories among the existing buildings. Drawn by gr8 Creations Ltd.
View on Google Maps Outside Kigali, Rwanda
This is a potential project, not a commitment. It depends on funding, a formal agreement with the Church and the right partnerships. We would rather share an honest early-stage vision than a polished promise.

Next milestone: a formal agreement with the Church, then a funded feasibility study.

Get involved early

Want to help this happen?

You don’t need to fund a wing: every gift, large or small, brings this closer. And if you, your company or your network could help in a bigger way, we would love to talk, no pledge required.

What I do

Corporate travel, with a reason to pack heavy.

My work in commercial real estate runs across the complex and emerging markets I cover, in Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia. I travel light, just a carry-on, so the checked-baggage allowance I am entitled to goes to something better than a second case of my own: school supplies, carried by hand to the children who need them.

On the ground

It started with one bag to Rwanda

The first was not a plan. I had a work trip to Rwanda, some spare room in my luggage, and the thought that the space could be useful. One bag of supplies, handed over in person.

It is now standard on almost every trip where it is possible. I fill the checked allowance I would otherwise leave empty with pens, pencils, notebooks, books and basics, and deliver them by hand to a school chosen with local partners.

Local expertise

Judgment, not just good intentions

Working in these markets day to day, I have learned what separates a project that lasts from one that stalls: the site, the real local build and running costs, and whether it can be delivered and sustained by people on the ground.

So the foundation commits only to what is viable, and runs everything through trusted local partners. Local expertise, local cost, local execution.

See the projects this supports

How a bag comes together

From my flat in Prague to a classroom

Every run starts at home. In the year since that first bag, packing has become its own small ritual: supplies bought across Prague, spread out on the floor and the table, then sorted and pressed into two cases until the zips barely close.

On the last trip it was not only me. My son’s kindergarten pitched in, donating school supplies and children’s books, so a class of little ones in Prague helped fill the cases for children they will never meet.

Supply runs in action

Where the bags have gone

Each run starts as two suitcases packed by hand and carried out on the trip. Here is where they have been delivered so far, country by country. Swipe through each one.

Supply run

Kenya

Pens, exercise books, sharpeners and hygiene packs, shared out class by class at a coastal primary school. The children tore them open on the spot, holding everything up the moment it became theirs.

Supply run

Rwanda

Two cases packed in Europe and carried out by hand, then unpacked with the school’s teachers. Colour pencils, notebooks and classroom basics went straight into the children’s hands the same morning.

Supply run

Burundi

A morning with the children of an orphanage run by local sisters: school supplies, footballs and hygiene items, plus juice and treats for the whole yard, all handed over in person alongside the staff who care for them every day.

Supply run

Tanzania

Two full suitcases opened in front of a hall of children, everything from pencils and notebooks to footballs and skipping ropes. Delivered in person to a community school and children’s home, with time spent in the classrooms and with the youngest ones.

Be part of it

Send the next bag

Every run is supplies bought and carried by hand, and every gift comes back to you in photos and receipts once delivered, so you see exactly where it landed.

Thank you

Your brick is in.

Thank you. Your gift is now part of something being built, patiently and in public. You’ll receive photos and receipts once your gift is delivered, and progress updates along the way.

Make MOCO self-sufficient

Know someone who’d add a brick too?

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