The Invisible Ones: Homeless Combat Veterans (2008)
This is the special 10th anniversary re-edited version of multi-award-winning documentary "The Invisible Ones: Homeless Combat Veterans" originally released by San Diego Video Production crew Mark Schulze and Patty Mooney of Crystal Pyramid Productions.
A review by Lane Tobias, OB Rag:
A few months ago, I volunteered to review “The Invisible Ones: Homeless Combat Veterans”, a documentary by Patty Mooney and Mark Schulze that depicts homeless combat veterans in San Diego. At first view, I was emotionally uninterested. This was due in large part to the fact I had just begun working as a case manager with homeless individuals and families, and was admittedly burned out by the word “homeless”. The second time I watched the documentary I found myself attached to the screen, as I have settled into my job and become further dedicated to serving San Diego’s homeless and hungry
Presented with one-on-one accounts from homeless veterans, outreach workers, advocates, and politicians, the viewer is continuously reminded that most combat veterans are suffering from some form of mental illness related to their experiences at war. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is the prevailing illness in the lives of veterans, and the documentary does an excellent job of explaining the vicious cycle that can lead once functional, affable, dedicated people into extreme mental illness and eventually, homelessness.
The statistics provided in the documentary regarding homeless combat veterans are jarring: 10% of California’s military veterans live in San Diego, and somewhere between 30% and 40% are homeless – putting that population at somewhere between 2,000 and 4,000 people.
Veterans Village of San Diego Treatment Center director Gary Parker estimates in the film that 40% of San Diego’s homeless are veterans. If those statistics are somewhat close to true (my personal experience has led me to believe that statistics regarding the homeless are well below the reality, due to the difficulty in collecting hard data) that means we have at least 2,000 homeless veterans here in San Diego – most of which have extreme cases of PTSD. In consequence of not getting proper psychiatric and medical treatment upon returning from combat, many of these people have concurrent drug and alcohol addictions. Here in America’s Finest City, we have thousands of people just like that living on our streets.
The documentary primarily recounts the services provided by organizations dedicated to military veterans. One of these organizations, Veterans Village of San Diego, formed in the early 80’s by Vietnam Veterans struggling to make it on their own. It has now become one of the most successful and well-regarded homeless recovery programs in San Diego.
On its website, the Village is described as having originally started “as a social model” that is “now integrated with structured case management and mental health therapy”. Veterans Village is unique in that it has services that address mental health, addiction, medical needs, family issues, and employment training all in the same place. They also have a sober living program for veterans who pass through their recovery programs that will soon be able to house over 200 people – making it an all encompassing service center for people who need it the most.
Another organization/annual event depicted in the film, Stand Down, is targeted more at those who are not yet comfortable seeking assistance from a systemic organization like the Village but may still benefit from attending a one-time event where they can learn what is available to them and seek help. Stand Down, which began here in San Diego two decades ago and has now become a nationwide event, is credited with being the first prominent event to bring attention to homeless veterans. While the two are not directly related, Stand Down can be seen as a gateway to the services provided at places like the Village (which were not available at the time veterans were returning from Korea or Vietnam) and might provide new information for someone who has been living on the street for many years but has yet to seek help.
Throughout the film, service providers are optimistic for the future of returning combat veterans due to the advancement in services available today as opposed to thirty years ago. There is concern, however, that the sheer number of veterans returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will make it difficult to reach everyone who needs help.
According to the Patrick McCaffrey Foundation, as of July 2006 approximately 18,490 soldiers had returned from Iraq and Afghanistan with major injuries. Imagine how that number has grown in three years. The signature injury of the current war is brain injury that may not show full effects until later on, and the worry is that the people who do not properly treat these injuries may inevitably fall into homelessness and drug addiction – the same cycle all over again.
Much has been said recently about the changing face of homelessness, as more families and individuals are being forced to the streets by the deepening recession and the inevitable job losses that come with it. This documentary, and more importantly the work of organizations such as VVSD and Stand Down, remind us that the face of homelessness really hasn’t changed all that much. It is a defining characteristic of American culture when those who literally risk their lives to protect our freedoms are left to fend for themselves when all they really need is preventive support. It is also characteristic of our lack of compassion to the homeless in general; if we didn’t turn such a blind eye to those living on the street around us, maybe veterans wouldn’t be at such high risk of becoming homeless in the first place.
During the documentary, the idea of seeking out homeless veterans and offering help rather than making them come and find it was brought up a number of times. Maybe the “Invisible Ones” are too proud, embarrassed, or mentally ill to come forward on their own – but those barriers should not prevent us from providing them with services in a dignified way. I am personally conflicted on this issue; on one hand, more people would utilize services if they are brought right to them.
On the other hand, if someone has to find their way to a service provider on their own, it shows they are dedicated to getting help. In the case of veterans, however, the barriers to seeking help (drug addiction, PTSD, paranoia) brought on by living on the street are so influential that word of mouth may not be enough. Inevitably, much of the impetus is on us. Although part of the stimulus package extended benefits for veterans, it is through citizen action that true legislative change will come. If we are going to reach the unreachable, we all have to chip in.
Overall, I thought the documentary did a great job of presenting homelessness amongst combat veterans as a problem we all need to take interest in – not just those who “support the troops” overseas. If you are like me and want to put an end to wars and violence, it is imperative that we publicize the devastating effects on long term mental health and well-being that wars have on soldiers, their families, and inevitably, the communities they return to.
As Dr. Jon Nachison, co-founder of Stand Down and a Vietnam veteran himself, stood inside San Diego’s winter shelter tent, he philosophized on the irony of society’s treatment of homeless veterans: “I’d like to see a day when we don’t need to shelter people in a tent like this. Because one of the things I wonder is are we sheltering the vets or are we sheltering the people out there from seeing the vets”.
I wonder too.
[All proceeds from this video are contributed to VVSD in San Diego.]
For more information about how you can help our homeless combat veterans and learn more about veterans’ issues here in San Diego and elsewhere, please visit the websites below:
http://www.vvsd.net/ – Veterans Village San Diego
http://www.vvsd.net/standdown.htm – San Diego Stand Down
http://www.sduvc.org/ – United Veterans Council of San Diego
http://www.sdvfp.org/ – San Diego Veterans for Peace
http://www.cavaf.org/ – California Veterans Assistance Foundation
http://www.veteransvillage.org/ – Patrick McCaffrey Foundation
www.iava.org – Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America