December 19, 2019
Hiding In Plain Sight and Fighting For A Home are two short films on the complexities of homelessness from School of Sustainability and Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication students in Peter Byck’s Sustainability Storytelling course.
Hiding in Plain Sight spotlights a woman’s experience with homelessness and the special challenges she faces that differ from men. The film’s protagonist struggles to find nutrition, health care and shelter while trying to fill roles as a caretaker, mother and friend. First-time filmmakers Dawson Morford, Katharina Saloman and Sarah Aly El Sayed piece together a powerful portrait of a unique partnership between a homeless woman and a chronically ill man, while chronicling the plight of homeless women in Phoenix, Arizona. Highlighting the vulnerabilities of unsheltered women, the filmmakers show us there is no single narrative for the multiple demographic groups of homeless people. Women, specifically, face unique personal safety and health hurdles while living on the streets.
Students in Byck’s Sustainability Storytelling course expose social conundrums and amplify human stories through a sustainability lens and the medium of film. They closely examine the social pillar of sustainability by telling powerful stories and searching for solutions. Audience members were so moved at the recent screenings at the School of Sustainability and Cronkite School, that they reached out to ask if the homeless veteran needed further help. At the Cronkite screening, mattresses and financial support were donated. Students know they are looking at highly complex challenges without easy solutions, but as Dawson Mofford said, the audience response “was encouraging because we saw how our work was already helping people.”
Top photo: Hiding in Plain Sight filmmakers (L to R) Dawson Mofford, Katharina Saloman and Sarah Aly El Sayed