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  • Writer's pictureLehmann Film Productions

Patton Veteran's Project "I Was There" Filmmaking Workshops

Updated: Jul 28, 2020

by Aaron Lehmann

In June 2018, I had the pleasure of working with Patton Veteran's Project at the James J. Peters VA Medical Center as a filmmaking instructor. "I Was There" workshops consists of intensive four, half-day classes, where the students conceptualize and produce their own films. Check out the work done HERE.

from PVP's website: Patton Veteran's Project's mission is to help veterans coping with posttraumatic stress reduce social isolation and strengthen family, community, and professional bonds. They accomplish this mission through intensive filmmaking workshops enabling participants to collaborate with peers to process their service experiences. They also incorporate screening events that validate veterans’ experiences, advance community dialogue, and educate the public about the mental health challenges facing veterans and military families.

Benjamin Patton teaching editing to Veteran student

In 2011, having co-led film camps for several summers where teenage boys and girls produced short

films largely centering on adolescent identity, Ben Patton wondered whether this same process of collaborating to create visual narratives this way could also benefit veterans returning from combat deployment as they sought to transition home and find their “new norm.” This inspiration led to the inception of the I WAS THERE Film Workshops initiative. In the Spring of 2011, he and a team of professional filmmakers were invited to host their veterans film workshop at the Warrior Transition Unit at Fort Carson, CO where hundreds of soldiers were undergoing mental health treatment. Soon afterwards, he formed a non-profit organization, the Patton Veterans Project, to formally house the program.

Since then, the Patton Veterans Project (PVP) has hosted more than 50 film workshops at 8 military bases, VA hospitals, universities, and private clinics both in the US and Israel, enabling more than 1000 veterans from 18 to 80 to collaborate on more than 300 short films expressing their experiences. Along the way, PVP began conducting pre- and post-workshop surveys of participants, indicating that the workshop results in a significant drop in PTSD symptoms, especially among those who report a PTSD diagnosis.

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