
Kassidy
Silva-Bush (left) and Leureanny Fernandes pose for a photo at the Youth
Purpose and Partnership program second annual film festival, Aug. 22.
The program, run by Children’s Services of Roxbury, allowed the teens to
create their own documentary and short film about mental health and
express their voice on the issue.In the auditorium of Roxbury’s Eliot Congregational Church, young people and community members gathered amid swirls of cotton candy and the aroma of buttered popcorn to showcase the voices of local youth through a teen-run film festival.
The Aug. 22 event marked the culmination of Children’s Services of Roxbury’s summer Youth Power and Partnership program, which runs after school from November through May with an expanded schedule as a summer program. It showcased teenmade films focused on youth mental health in a film festival with the theme, “Inside the Mind: Are We Really Ok?”
The theme and tagline for the event were selected by its teens, who also helped organize the event, run the registration and concessions tables and host the festival, in addition to developing and producing the films on display.
“This is the young people’s program,” said Harry Harding, vice president of innovation and strategic partnerships at Children’s Services of Roxbury.
Central to that goal, he said, is giving space for young people to have a voice.
“I think the youth perspective on any given topic is underutilized, not addressed, ignored or muted to some degree,” Harding said.
Those perspectives were on
display in a short documentary that featured local perspectives and
statistics around youth mental health, as well as a short film about
connection with others.
Young people in the program said YPP has helped them use their voices and express themselves — on the screen and off.
Kassidy
Silvia-Bush, a peer leader in the program and incoming junior at
Madison Park Technical Vocational High School, said that every day,
during the morning check in, the young people in the program have to
answer an ice-breaker-style question in front of the group — for
example, “If you had a superpower, what would it be?” — which helps them
get comfortable speaking in front of bigger groups.
“It
becomes habit and easier for you to do,” she said. “It’s definitely
something I’ve learned from the program — something I hope everybody
learns from the program — like using our voice.”
And
it’s a skill she said she hopes she and her peers will take away to
other parts of their lives to speak up for their communities.
When
it comes to mental health, Leureanny Fernandes, a rising junior at
Boston Collegiate Charter School, said that she saw the film festival as
an important opportunity for young people in the community to share
their voices on a topic where they might not always be heard. For young
people who feel like their mental health is dismissed, or who fail to
acknowledge the challenges they’re facing, perspectives like the ones in
the short film and documentary produced by the YPP teens may help them
open up, Fernandes said.
“If
they’re able to see other people going through the same things, if
they’re able to get acknowledged, I feel like our film festival can help
them be seen and heard and hopefully help them get the help that they
need,” Fernandes said.
The
event also highlighted other submissions from local youth. Nosakhare
Ogbomo, a digital media assistant with the program, said that staff
introduced the young people in the program to the basic skills and then
let them loose.
“Tell
them about the camera basics and editing basics and let them create,” he
said. “That’s how you test out creativity, how you test out who knows
what, who can build on certain things.”
It
means that participants had the chance to lead the production of the
two films. For example, Silvia-Bush worked on editing the short
documentary; Fernandes worked behind the camera for the short film.
The
“Inside the Mind” event is the program’s second annual film festival
and reflects a shift in the program’s mission. Last year’s film festival
focused on the dangers of social media. Before the COVID- 19 pandemic,
the initiative centered on building better relationships between police
and youth of color; when it launched in 1995, “YPP” even stood for
“Youth and Police in Partnership.”
But
in the early 2020s, Children’s Services of Roxbury broadened the
program’s scope to help local teens gain skills for today’s digital
economy and to build stronger connections across the broader community,
not just with law enforcement.
The revamped program started with podcasting, then later expanded to film production, and festivals.
“This
film festival is a culmination of all that experimentation and the
history of the program, along with the young people’s input, to say, ‘We
want to do more community events. We want to showcase our skills. We
want to still keep some of the components from the leadership
development and community engagement that were there before,’” Harding
said.
Before Ogbomo
worked with the program as a digital media assistant, he was a peer
leader in the program, before it expanded its focus. Ogbomo said he’s
seen the program grow at “a massive rate.”
“I think YPP is only going up from here,” he said. “Now that they implemented this, it can only power up.”
Although
some of the teens may not have aspirations of making movies as a career
— Fernandes said she wants to be a forensic psychologist, while
Silvia-Bush said she’s looking to be an architect — they feel these new
skills will serve them well.
“I
feel like I can add into any resume that I have, any future job
postings I have, it’s good to have in my toolbox and know that I’m able
to do it,” Fernandes said. “I never thought I would be interested in
this. But, actually going in it, it was really fun and really cool to
do.”
Some of the
program’s shifting landscape is quite literally seen in the YPP’s
current operations space, which it rents at the Eliot Congregational
Church in Roxbury.
The
program moved when trying to cram 45 teens into a small conference room
in Children’s Services of Roxbury’s headquarters on Dudley Street
proved unwieldy. Harding said the space is temporary as CSR is pursuing a
capital campaign to renovate its main space.
At
the same time, Harding said, leadership for the program is still
figuring out what it is and what it can be, “very much a program
developing its identity in real time.”
“There’s
still no creaks and cracks and things we have to mold and fix and work
on,” Harding said. “But I think that’s also part of the beauty of it.”