From Celebration to Collision: How One Call Changed Everything — But Not My Mission
May 1st began as a perfect day — a holiday, a celebration, and the day of our fourth Bitcoin Cash meetup. It was meant to be one of our best moments yet, bringing together the spirit of International Workers’ Day with a growing community of Bitcoin Cash enthusiasts.
I set out with pride. Banner in the car, cashstamps ready for distribution, and a smile that only someone building something meaningful can understand — like a father watching his vision come to life. When I arrived, everything came together beautifully. We decorated the space with an African touch, making sure the setting matched the significance of the moment. People started arriving, energy was high, and we even took a group photo to mark the occasion.
This was the energy of our fourth meetup…

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Everything was going perfectly.
Then I got a call.
A call I now refer to as “the call of destiny.” The kind of call that changes everything in an instant — turning joy into misfortune.
I was asked to pick up a few participants coming from Maputo who were stranded at a stop in Matola and didn’t know how to reach the event location. Without hesitation, I went.
Misfortune doesn’t knock. It doesn’t warn you. It doesn’t care about timing or reason — it just happens.
I took the same road I always use, one I know very well. I was driving at around 40–60 km/h when suddenly, out of nowhere, a car appeared at high speed — driving in the wrong lane, straight toward me. In an attempt to avoid a direct collision, I swerved off the road.
And then it happened.
I crashed into a wall.
By some miracle, I walked away with only minor scratches and psychological shock. But the vehicle — my CHAPA — suffered severe front-end damage. The wall I hit was heavily damaged too.
> Minutes later… everything changed.
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And the person who caused it?
They didn’t stop. They disappeared — leaving me alone to face everything.
What followed was a difficult and complex situation. I had to deal directly with the property owners, and the vehicle was temporarily held while the necessary procedures were completed.
The vehicle was later taken to the police yard, where I went through the required administrative steps, payments, and processes to resolve the matter.
On May 4th, I was able to retrieve the vehicle after completing the formal requirements and settlement.
At this stage, my focus shifted to stabilizing operations and reorganizing the next steps.
The CHAPA income that supported both my monthly Bitcoin Cash conversions and meetup funding was impacted, along with the operational budget for upcoming activities.
The vehicle will now require repairs estimated at around 70,000 meticais (~2 BCH), including parts and labor.
This has temporarily slowed progress, but the direction of the project remains unchanged.
Earlier this year, we had already begun rebuilding momentum through meetups, onboarding, and local Bitcoin Cash adoption efforts in Mozambique — and that work continues.
Despite this setback, the mission remains active: expanding real-world BCH usage and building sustainable adoption on the ground.
If you would like to support this work, contributions can be sent here:
bitcoincash:qqxeek2n27yqntj7mweznzllzt870fmvzyw0ksnpd9

I’ve always counted on this community, and I still do.
Because despite everything — I’m not stopping.
I may slow down. I may rebuild from the ground up. I’m hurt, yes. But I’m not finished.
I will not quit.
Not now. Not ever. We keep building.
Here you can find the BCH mobile billboard campaign to restore the car.
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