Mark Zuckerberg’s school for low-income kids is shutting down, sparking debate on billionaire philanthropy and the fragility of donor-funded projects.
The school, founded to give children from disadvantaged backgrounds a better chance at education, had grown into a vital lifeline in its community.
Its closure is more than the loss of a building—it represents a profound setback for families who depended on its support and saw it as a beacon of hope.
The project was funded primarily through the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative,CZI, which invested about $100 million from 2018 through 2024.
Unlike traditional schools, the Primary School was built to serve as a community hub, designed to offer equal opportunities to children facing the toughest odds.
Despite the heavy financial backing, the school failed to achieve long-term stability. It struggled to attract significant funding beyond CZI’s support, and public contributions remained limited.
Board chairman Jean-Claude Brizard highlighted the challenge, stressing, “If a project depends 100% or even 50% on philanthropy, it’s not a viable long-term model.”
By April 2025, the difficult decision was made: the Primary School would close by the end of 2026. While official statements gave little detail, the turning point came when CZI pulled its financial support.
Donations had already dropped sharply—from $8 million in 2022 to just $3.7 million in 2023—pushing the school’s budget into crisis.
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For many families, the announcement was devastating. Parents openly expressed frustration, pointing to the contradiction between Zuckerberg’s soaring wealth, which jumped by an astonishing $85 billion in 2024 to reach over $200 billion, and the decision to close a school for struggling children.
One parent voiced it bluntly: “He’s a billionaire. Why would he close a school for poor kids?”
In response, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative explained that it will pivot its focus toward scientific research and artificial intelligence.
This shift underscores a broader pattern in tech philanthropy, where investments increasingly target high-tech ventures rather than community-centered projects.
The closure of the Primary School highlights a hard reality: philanthropic initiatives heavily dependent on one wealthy donor rarely endure over the long term without diverse streams of support.
For the families affected, the loss is deeply personal. The school was not just a place of learning—it was a symbol of promise in a society where financial hardship too often dictates a child’s future.
As the community faces this difficult transition, larger questions remain. How enduring and impactful is philanthropy from the ultra-wealthy? Should billionaires like Zuckerberg be expected to ensure that their charitable projects last, or is it the responsibility of governments and communities to build more resilient systems that do not collapse when a single benefactor withdraws?
For now, the closure leaves behind a painful reminder: even projects born of good intentions can falter without a model built on steady, broad-based support.
Leravi.












