‘How I met Satoshi’: The mission to teach 100M people about Bitcoin by 2030

Bitcoin News

Dušan Matuska is — among many other things — a Bitcoin educator and consultant. The Slovak’s dream is to educate 100 million people about Bitcoin by 2030 through talks, podcasts, webinars, workshops and even a Bitcoin education center in a far-flung destination (plans are currently under wraps). 

Alongside his Bitcoin teaching aspirations, he assists on a small-scale Bitcoin mining facility in Slovakia, he co-founded the crypto café known as Paralelni Polis in the country’s capital, Bratislava and he’s translated well-known Bitcoin books into his native tongue, Slovak.

But, how did he get here? And, what does meeting Satoshi have to do with it?

It starts with Bitcoin, which he first heard about Bitcoin in 2015. But, like many people, “I didn’t take a lot of notice. I thought it was a scam, it was a pyramid scheme and all these kinds of things,” he told Cointelegraph.

Nonetheless, equipped with a background in mathematics and buoyed by the enthusiasm of a tenacious friend fascinated by open source technologies, Matuska not so much fell but swan dived down the rabbit hole during the 2017 bull run.

He suddenly realized, “Oh my God, this Bitcoin thing is something really amazing.”

Matuska in his trademark Bitcoin sweater. Source: Matuska

He took time off his teaching and consulting jobs to study Bitcoin. Within months, he deployed his public speaking skills to give the first free talks of many about Bitcoin. At his first “open workshop, where 40 or 50 people came” in early 2018, something had begun to click.

“Teaching something that I have a passion for feels natural to me. I gave webinars, consultations, free talks, all these kinds of things related to Bitcoin. Then, we founded Paralelná Polis in Bratislava.”

The crypto cafe — as it’s also known — is the baby brother to the Paralelni Polis café in Prague, Czechia. It’s a cafe rooted in alternative learning, or “parallel education,” which harks back to when Czeckoslavia endured communist rule.

Paralená Polis or the “crypto café” coffee shop and meeting space. Dušan Matuska is on right crouching with glasses. Source: Matuska. 

It is an apt epithet for a safe space to learn, tinker with and eventually use cryptocurrency, “no fiat is allowed,” Matuska added.

The parallels of teaching about restricted worlds during the communist regime and learning about an alternative financial world where fiat currency is surplus to requirements are clear-cut at the cafe. Matuska explained:

“So, the idea was not to fight against the system but to build up a parallel system. The same as Bitcoin. Bitcoin is a peaceful protest against the system. It‘s not going to break things, but slowly it will make them obsolete.”

While helping out as a barista at the cafe, Matuska spoke to unassuming crypto enthusiasts, from 73-year-old former bankers to senior citizens curious about transacting with crypto.

Elderly women learning about Bitcoin at a bazaar run by the crypto café in Slovakia. Source: Matuska

“I often use the example of the 73-year-old man when educating people about Bitcoin. If he can learn how to use a Bitcoin wallet and how to pay with Bitcoin, anyone can.”

Better yet, the reason why the septuagenarian transacted via Bitcoin is that it was “easier for him than it was to use online banking.” Matuska confirmed to Cointelegraph that the elderly man was not, in fact, Satoshi Nakamoto.

While sadly, the Bratislava crypto cafe closed last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Prague cafe lives on. Plus, the foundations were laid and Matuska had two epiphanies: Bitcoin is for everyone and Bitcoin solves problems.

For Matuska, whether it’s sending money to a cousin in the United States, bequeathing money to grandchildren or simply “helping people save money to fight inflation,” it’s not just some cool tech or  “number-go-up technology.”

One day, when his girlfriend queried “my teaching colleagues are asking about how to educate kids about Bitcoin. Is there a book for them?” Matuska shifted his focus from teaching adults to teaching children as well.

Thanks to the help of other Bitcoin educators in the space, as well as a successful crowdfunding campaign, Matuska has sent over 2,000 Bitcoin books to schools across Slovakia, translated by himself and his team into Slovak.

Slovakian schoolchildren reading “Bitcoin Money.” Source: Matuska 

Expanding his Bitcoin education aspirations into schools was a deft move. He‘ll need all the help he can get to reach the goal of educating 100 million people about Bitcoin by 2030. To keep track of the numbers, Matuska used to keep “an excel spreadsheet, then I used to count YouTube video views but there was too much overlap.”

He’s now working on a series of metrics to reach his goal, undoubtedly tracking the number of downloads on the Bitcoin podcasts he records.

In the podcast series, the Slovak answers common questions and thought experiments he was exposed to during his Bitcoin teaching. Among the most popular questions and, in fact, the first podcast he recorded, is a riff on Satoshi Nakamoto’s anonymity.

It’s called, “How I met Satoshi,” and refers to a theoretical meeting with the creator of Bitcoin. Matuska explained:

“Just like Pythagoras and his theorem, we don’t actually need to know if he was a good guy or a bad guy; if he was orange, blue, yellow or black, whatever. The key thing is that the Pythagoras theorem works again and again.”

Related: One man’s plan to orange pill a nation: Bitcoin Senegal

It is possible to mathematically prove that the Pythagoras Theorum works thousands of years after his death. “It will be the same for Satoshi‘s calculations.”

While Matuska “meets” with Satoshi, it‘s more about the real “meeting” that occurs when you begin to engage with the works of a genius, whether it‘s Einstein, Michelangelo or Aristotle.

Ultimately, for the founder of Bitcoin, Matuska shares that we “should be happy that we don‘t know who this person is.”

“The best thing that Satoshi did was to create Bitcoin. The second best thing Satoshi did was to evaporate.”

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