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  • Adam is going to Cambodia to fight sex trafficking, and we're raising money to help him do it.

  • The Brick Foundation continues to support our scholarship recipients ensuring access to education.

  • Special thanks to Ben & Jerry's for letting us take over their store and raise funds.

  • Read about KB's girls dormatory project. Thanks to KB, more girls are going to school than ever before.

  • Read about our first project, the solar-powered Dzoole Youth Center.

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About us

In 2008, a young United States Peace Corps Volunteer named Martha Pigott wanted to build a Community Center in Dzoole, Malawi.  Her goal was to improve public health and education within her community by providing residents a safe location for a host of much needed community services.  Martha needed to raise funds, but she wanted to make sure contributions were tax deductible.  The Brick Foundation was her answer.

Upon learning of Martha's project and her donation dilemma, Martha's brother David started The Brick Foundation.  The Brick Foundation's original purpose was to fund Martha's Peace Corps project.  The Brick Foundation achieved that goal.  Recognizing the potential benefit The Brick Foundation could provide to other Peace Corps volunteers, Martha and David kept The Brick Foundation going and eventually expanded its mission to anyone with a worthy project, Peace Corps volunteer or not. 

Since 2008, The Brick Foundation has brought medical supplies to Central America, built student housing for girls, established scholarship funds, and a supported a host of other amazing projects.  Now, The Brick Foundation begins its most important project to date: helping Adam Grush fight sex trafficking in Cambodia.  To learn more about Adam's project click on the link below.  You can then use the "donate" button at the top of the screen to support this worthy cause!

  • Featured post

    Support Letter

    I have a very clear memory of the moment that changed the trajectory of my life forever. I was crammed into the back of a tuk-tuk with four other men (three fellow “rookies” along with the executive director of a local anti-trafficking NGO), and we had just taken an unplanned turn onto one of the darkest, most dangerous roads within Phnom Penh’s seedy underbelly. We had already visited a handful of local bars known for housing victims of sex trafficking, and we were searching for one last establishment that our leader was intent on investigating. I was only half paying attention to the passing lights and sounds as my soul was on fire with the ramifications of interacting with trafficking victims, as well as perpetrators, face-to-face, and I was deep in thought about how those experiences would shape my future. I was brought quickly back from my reverie, however, when flashing lights were suddenly replaced by dark alleys and quick glimpses of girls lined up on the floor of unmarked and unfurnished entryways. Perhaps the lines between “bar” and “brothel” and “safe” and “unsafe” were blurrier than I imagined, but it appeared as though we had stumbled upon a row of brothels from which the only way to safely exit was to purchase and follow through with sex with an underage girl. After maybe a minute or so, a gang of men on motorcycles crept from the shadows, surrounded our tuk-tuk, and attempted to force us into a side alley (and presumably into one of the brothels). I could tell from our leader’s startled response that this was a new and worrisome experience for him, despite his years of experience investigating sex trafficking and background as a former marine. However, in that moment, I felt absolutely no fear whatsoever. On the contrary, I felt more at peace and more confident in what I was doing than I had ever felt in my entire life. It was in that moment that I knew that my purpose in life was to rescue girls from sex trafficking, and I made a silent promise – to myself, to all of the girls I met on the streets of Phnom Penh, and to the girls I had yet to meet who were and would become trapped in the perpetual cycle of rape and abuse that constitutes sex trafficking – that I would be back.
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