Showing posts with label naperville independent film festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label naperville independent film festival. Show all posts

Monday, March 29, 2021

Naperville: A “Stagecoach Stop” to Support Homeless Families

[Naperville, IL, 3/29/21] Headquarters for HEAR US Inc., the unique national nonprofit supporting homeless families and youth, Naperville is like a stagecoach stop for founder and sole employee Diane Nilan. It’s her opportunity to re-stock books, get replacement signs for her van, touch base with board members, and to call attention to her new book and film. 

Her van, dubbed “Tillie the Turtle,” or T2 (now her second vehicle), serves as her home, office and vehicle for cross-country travels which she’s been doing since November 2005. As turtles do, Nilan carries almost everything she owns in her van, her only home. Her travels have taken her to 49 states, chronicling hundreds of stories shared by children, youth and parents experiencing homelessness. 

Nilan, the former founder of the homeless shelter in Joliet (Daybreak, formerly Will County PADS), and director of the PADS shelter at Hesed House in Aurora, created HEAR US to fill what she saw as a tremendous gap—the voices and visibility of homeless families and youth. She has been instrumental in attaining, protecting, and promoting educational rights of homeless students, legislation with its origin in the Fox Valley, since 1993. 

Tillie1, Nilan's first van, bore a sign saying 1.5 million kids
were homeless in the US.
She points to a disturbing fact, depicted on the sign on her van’s back door. “My first sign reflected the estimated number of homeless students—1.5 million in 2007,” Nilan stated. “I just ordered a replacement sign and the number is now 7 million.”


Part of the dramatic increase is due to the work of HEAR US, filming and producing short videos featuring kids and parents sharing their stories of homelessness, including their hopes and dreams. Her films raise awareness of the still largely invisible homeless families and youth who don’t typically stand on street corners asking for help. They bounce around from friend’s couches to motels to parking lots and more. “My all-time favorite is my first film, My Own Four Walls, when I knew nothing about filmmaking.”


Nilan credits Professor Laura Vazquez and her Northern Illinois University students for their production expertise of that film. She and Vazquez then teamed up to film and produce award-winning on the edge: Family Homelessness in America, which screened at the Naperville Film Festival and was shown on PBS stations. They’ve collaborated on other films, but Nilan says her professor-friend-guru has taught her enough to be on her own. 


The pandemic put the brakes on Nilan’s travels for a few months, giving her time to write her memoir, Dismazed and Driven - My Look at Family Homelessness in America, which she hopes Anderson’s Bookshop in Naperville will carry. 


HEAR US just released a poignant new film, Capital Failure: Family Homelessness Surging, which Nilan filmed in Raleigh, NC in the first part of 2021. This 12-minute film focuses on homeless families stuck in motels. “Jamie, the mother who shared her story, gave a striking description of what millions of families in similar situations endure,” credits Nilan. “Anyone who watches this eye-opening film will better understand the debilitating nature of family homelessness.”


The virtual world has opened up possibilities for HEAR US presentations. She’s recently presented at a state conference in Minnesota, Columbia University graduate social work students, and to a forum on homeless students at North Carolina State University. This month, Nilan will address audiences in Ft. Worth and Austin, Texas, and will speak to a virtual gathering of state coordinators for homeless education across the country. 


She and a colleague are planning a rare joint tour in September from Texas to California, one which promises to get them in “good trouble” in memory of Congressman John Lewis. 


Information about HEAR US, www.hearus.us. 


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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Homelessness Film Heading to National Broadcast, Scheduled for Aurora Screening




[Naperville, IL, 11/28/11] Take a good film and make it better! The award-winning documentary on the edge, heading for national broadcast, required local filmmakers to hone their already-acclaimed film. The enhanced version will enjoy a Fox Valley premiere screening on Dec. 5, 7 pm at Aurora's Rosary High School in the McEnroe Auditorium.

Film producer Diane Nilan, who previously ran the homeless shelter at Hesed House, has been invited to Rosary as part of their Human Rights week activities. Nilan has been on the road for the past 6 years, living in and working out of her modest motorhome, traveling over 130,000 miles of mostly backroads chronicling homelessness. Her Naperville-based national nonprofit organization, HEAR US Inc., gives voice and visibility to homeless children and youth.

Laura Vazquez, the film's director, teaches at Northern Illinois University in the communication department. She and Nilan have worked together on several homelessness-awareness films over the past 6 years. Her film expertise combined with Nilan's knowledge of homelessness has gained national attention and respect, opening doors of Congress for film screenings and leading to on the edge being selected for the Broadcast Education Association Festival of Media Arts, First Place Faculty Division this April. At September's Naperville Independent Film Festival, a record crowd of nearly 300 people attended the on the edge screening.

Technical improvements, including closed-captioning, will make the film eligible for airing on public television stations nationwide. Nilan promises a huge grassroots campaign to get the film shown on PBS affiliates nationwide. She points out, "The seven women in this film speak for millions of others in similar situations, mostly invisible, struggling with homelessness, trauma and poverty. They must be heard!"

The screening at Rosary will be a joint fundraiser for Mutual Ground, the Fox Valley's domestic violence shelter, and HEAR US. Free-will donations ensure everyone can afford to attend. For more information, visit the HEAR US website (http://hearus.us), or call 630/225-5012.

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Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Better Than an Oscar!


Getting people to leave their homes on the opening night of the much-awaited fall television season is no easy task, especially to see a documentary about women and children without homes. But close to 300 people came from near and far to watch on the edge, our documentary film in the Naperville Independent Film Festival screened Monday, 9/19, at the venerable Ogden 6 Theater.
Watching the crowd amass was exciting, especially because it was a mixture of people I knew from my days prior to my running the PADS shelter at Hesed House and a considerable slew of folks who responded to Bridge Community’s urging for people to see our award-winning documentary. Having screened our year-old film countless times, I could judge the audience’s engagement by their chuckles, their silence, and their palpable angst as the 7 courageous women in this film shared their heart-wrenching stories of traversing in and out of homelessness.

The opportunity to participate in Naperville's festival was an unplanned opportunity—Glessna and Edmond Coisson attended our HEAR US Inc. tribute to Mary Lou Cowlishaw last October at North Central College. The tribute included the premiere screening of on the edge and resulted in the Coisson’s inviting our film’s director, Laura Vazquez, associate professor of communication at Northern Illinois University, to the festival.

One key reason for the record crowd at the delightfully friendly and refurbished Ogden 6 theater was the push by Bridge Communities to have their current and prospective volunteers and supporters attend prior to their ambitious “Sleep Out Saturday” this year set for Nov. 5th. Bridge leaders rightly figure if more people understand homelessness from homeless families' point of view, compassion and action will ensue.

With what seems to be a growing discord about the need to help families and individuals struggling for survival, the crowd at this film was on the far opposite end of the spectrum. My challenge urging them to participate in a “compassion epidemic” brought cheers instead of jeers. This positive energy gives a huge boost to those of us engaged in helping stave off the devastation of homelessness. My Naperville-based nonprofit organization, HEAR US Inc., continues to give voice and visibility to homeless children and youth through projects like on the edge.

Little did I know that in November 2005 when I left the Naperville border heading out on my unconventional sojourn—to chronicle faces and voices of homeless kids from across the nation for My Own Four Walls—that I’d be heading out for my 7th cross-country trip and our country would be in an economic quagmire that makes previous times of trouble pale. With the child poverty rate at a record high 22%, dark clouds loom on the horizon, especially for homeless families with toddlers, the subject of our new film, Littlest Nomads (in production).

My journey away from DuPage County begins Monday. Starting tomorrow I’ll be sporting new signage on my road-weary motorhome/office thanks to a generous collaboration with Design Resource Center and FastSigns, both Naperville businesses with a track record of benevolence. I’ll be venturing out to share a message of painful reality—soaring family homelessness at a time of conflicting political will—but I will recall the surge of compassion from the crowd that stepped from their comfort zones and comfortable homes to learn from these seven experts on homelessness. It’s better than an Oscar!

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Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Focus on Desperate Situations for Invisible DuPage Homeless Families


CONTACT:

Diane Nilan, HEAR US                                  Jennie Gates, Bridge Event Manager         
630/267-5424                                                  630/545-0610, ext. 19            
diane@hearus.us                                                          Jennie.Gates@BridgeCommunities.org



MEDIA PACKET  download PDF

Sitting on the corner of a sagging mattress in a “no-tell-motel” between two DuPage County towns, Diane Nilan listened to the logistical nightmare spelled out by parents of the 5 children crammed in this too-small room. No stranger to the plight of homeless families, she now shares these stories on the big screen, proud to be part of the 4th Annual Naperville Independent Film Festival.

On Monday night, Sept. 19, the award-winning documentary on the edge, which Nilan and Professor Laura Vazquez of Northern Illinois University filmed and produced, will fill the screen at Ogden Theaters, one of the official festival entries. This documentary focuses on seven women who share their stories of homelessness, much like the stories Nilan has heard over her past 25 years working with homeless adults and children, including those in DuPage County.

Nilan is the former director of the PADS shelter at Hesed House in Aurora and key influence for both the Illinois Education for Homeless Children Act and the federal McKinney-Vento Education for Homeless Children and Youth Act. She has traveled over 126,000 mostly backroads miles in America for the last 6 years giving voice and visibility to homeless children and youth under the banner of her nonprofit organization, HEAR US Inc. (www.hearus.us).

She explains the daunting statistics, “Way over 1.5 million children and youth are homeless, and the numbers are skyrocketing! Schools have identified a million students, but experience teaches that probably at least that many are unidentified.” Nilan worked for 2 years with 305 Chicago area school districts to help them comply with the McKinney-Vento Act, legislation sponsored by Congresswoman Judy Biggert (13-IL,R). From that experience emerged My Own Four Walls, Nilan’s first documentary featuring kids talking about their homelessness and what school means to them. HEAR US sells these DVDs and other awareness-raising items to organizations and the public.

The respected human service agency, Bridge Communities, Inc., a dynamic, grassroots, nonprofit organization committed to transforming the lives of homeless families in DuPage, is encouraging existing and potential volunteers and supporter to see on the edge so they better understand the stories behind the term “homeless.”  

Jennie Gates, event manager at Bridge Communities, adds, “The movie screening is a great kick-off for Sleep Out Saturday, Bridge’s flagship event that provides an opportunity for individuals, families, and community and church groups to actually do something about homelessness.  By sleeping out in tents, cars and boxes on November 5, participants will raise awareness of the plight of homeless families while raising much-needed funds to support the families in the Bridge program.”  More information about Sleep Out Saturday can be found at www.sleepoutsaturday.org.

All those attending this screening of on the edge will receive a memento from HEAR US to remind people of the need to assist this invisible population of families in DuPage and across the nation. 

The 60-minute film will be screened 8:20 pm at the Ogden 6Theaters, 1227 E Ogden Ave., $5. Both organizations will be on hand to answer questions. Nilan, the film’s producer, Vazquez, the director, and will do a brief Q&A following the film. For information, www.hearus.us, 630/225-5012, or diane@hearus.us

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