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'Seeing the humans': B.C. high schoolers turn documentary lens on the opioid crisis

For two years, Pearson College students filmed a documentary capturing the human side of the opioid crisis

Two years ago, a group of high schoolers left the bucolic campus of Pearson College on the rural outskirts of Victoria and made their way into the capital. Walking through the city streets, they quickly witnessed firsthand the ongoing impact of the opioid crisis.

鈥淚t's just an extremely apparent problem here,鈥 said student Daniel Melendro. 鈥淏ack home in Toronto, there's still definitely a problem, but it hadn't been nearly as big an issue as here. It was just really shocking to see it. 

鈥淚t made me realize that there are a lot of people suffering on the streets, all having very different experiences from me.鈥

This experience shattered long-held expectations of a city often regarded as one of the best in the country, added student Charvi Gupta, who hails from Alberta.

鈥淰ictoria is as a city that's very touristic and usually portrayed as perfect and very beautifully planned,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut there's a couple streets that are concentrated with people on the street and, to me, that made it seem a lot more fake. I realized that there was an issue that really needed to be addressed.鈥

On their way back to school that night, this sight still weighed heavily on their minds. That鈥檚 when they began brainstorming ways to take action and help the cause. 

After reaching out to experts, nonprofits, and advocacy groups, the students kept hearing the same thing 鈥 there was a dire need for more human stories from the opioid crisis. This resonated with student Bella Zhou.

鈥淎 lot of the media that we had watched surrounding this issue had a lot of stigma because it was portraying the crisis from the lens of people who weren't entirely involved or adjacent to the issue,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e really wanted to hear from people with lived and living experience.鈥

After a friend of the group who works as a filmmaker in Vancouver suggested the idea of a 鈥榗ommunity portrait鈥 documentary, Zhou, Melendro, and Gupta 鈥 alongside Ibby Hackwell, Darius Amanat-Markazi, Anna Pavlovska, and David Dokolo 鈥 took their cameras, and the project started taking shape.

Zhou saw visual media as the best medium for their project, believing it could capture a person鈥檚 history and experience, making the crisis feel personal rather than abstract.

A few weeks later, the high schoolers pitched their idea and received $4,000 in grants from the City of Victoria and Young Aurora. With the funds in hand, the collective began commuting from Metchosin to Victoria after school, during their free time. 

Initially expecting it to be much more challenging and anticipating hostility, the group was pleasantly surprised by how smoothly everything went.

鈥淎 lot of the people that we met were very open and super insightful,鈥 said Zhou. 鈥淭hey were just really willing to share their experiences.鈥

Visiting shelters, non-profits and volunteering for Victoria Cool Aid Society, the band of students heard countless 鈥渆ye-opening鈥 stories from people on the streets along the way. 

鈥淥ftentimes it seems [unhoused] people are portrayed as this homogeneous group that goes through the same thing,鈥 said Melendro. 鈥淏ut something I discovered was that everyone goes through something really different.

鈥淪ome people opened up to us about their experience with rapes in shelters and how they're never trusting a shelter again, while other people were saying that shelters were the only thing keeping them alive.鈥

This variety of personal experiences makes homelessness a unique and complex issue, difficult to solve despite the many services and resources available in the city, as Gupta discovered.

鈥淵ou just realize that it's like not as like simple as it seems,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t's really hard when there's nothing left to catch you, no safety nets, and how there's just so many cracks in the system.鈥

鈥淎 lot of the people we interviewed come from backgrounds that have a lot less privilege,鈥 added Melendro. 鈥淚 think there are a lot of systemic forces at play, such as family life, economic background, where you come from, etc.鈥

Although their age prevented them from accessing key locations, like safe consumption sites reserved for people 19 and older, it ended up being an advantage in connecting with people on the street and support workers.

鈥淚 think people felt it was truly lower stakes than if it they were talking to a legitimate news outlet,鈥 said Zhou. 鈥淎s high schoolers, we put ourselves in a vulnerable place, and I think that it allowed us to have conversations that just flowed more easily.鈥

After countless trips to and from Victoria, meeting with dozens of people, and filming hours of footage, the young collective is now finalizing what has been two years in the making.

As they prepare to present their 30-minute documentary on April 3, the group reflects on this transformative experience that reshaped their outlook on the opioid crisis.

鈥淭he biggest thing I've learned was how much power I actually had to make some place feel like home by鈥 talking to folks and provide them an outlet to express themselves and share their emotions,鈥 said Zhou. 

Starting the project with little knowledge of how to make an impact, the students now hope their work will inspire change and encourage others to engage in understanding and improving their community.

鈥淚 want people to confront [this issue] head-on and actually see the humans that comprise this conflict,鈥 said Zhou. 

鈥淚 hope this will inspire some movement in other places with the same issue,鈥 said Gupta. 鈥淚t would be great to see documentaries made in other cities across Canada鈥 and see that comparison.鈥 

The documentary will be presented on April 3 at The Mint (1414 Douglas St.), from 7 to 9:30 p.m. 

To learn more about the project, visit



Olivier Laurin

About the Author: Olivier Laurin

I鈥檓 a bilingual multimedia journalist from Montr茅al who began my journalistic journey on Vancouver Island in 2023.
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