#LightBoxFF: Using Instagram to Help Homeless Veterans

5 minute read

Welcome to this week’s edition of TIME LightBox Follow Friday, a series where we feature the work of photographers using Instagram in new, interesting and engaging ways. Regularly, we introduce you to the person behind the feed through his or her pictures and an interview with the photographer.

This week, LightBox speaks to Pablo Unzueta (@unzueta_), a freelance photographer based in Los Angeles who has been using Instagram to draw attention to the persisting problem of veteran homelessness. TIME LightBox selected Unzueta’s work as part of #TIMEvets, an initiative launched ahead of this year’s Veterans Day to explore the profound effects of war on soldiers and their families. Visit the #TIMEvets page for more information and for details on how to contribute your own images and stories.


LightBox: Tell us about yourself and how you became interested in photography.

Pablo Unzueta: I come from a family of photographers. The person who has influenced me the most was my grandmother who did documentary photography covering the landfills in Central America. She also was a wedding photography in Los Angeles. More often than not, I would find myself in the darkroom watching her develop rolls of film. At the time, I was not aware that I would become an aspiring photojournalist. I was only five or seven years old. Early on at 17, I began to document street life in Los Angeles. There, I began to develop my aesthetics; but also, I became aware that it wasn’t always a happy life for everyone. I felt that no one cared about poverty, war, corruption, etc. I found photography [could be] a source to generate some advocacy.

LightBox: What does Instagram provide you and this project specifically that other platforms don’t?

Pablo Unzueta: Instagram allows me to share with my followers these stories on a personal level. There are no guidelines, no AP style as to how you want to tell the story. It’s just me putting the context with the picture and allowing my followers to decide how they want to react. A lot of people have an account, so it makes it a great source to share stories and opinions, without getting [rejected] by news outlets.

LightBox: What is the purpose of your project?

Pablo Unzueta: The purpose for this project is to make people think critically and question why there are so many war veterans living on the street. More things should be done to prevent poverty rates from growing each year. The stories of these war veterans reflect the loss of hope. Overtime these people accept their lives the way they are. Many believe that shelter programs are “unreliable” and “unsafe”. Eventually, the street life molds into a long-lasting lifestyle. This issue is fairly complex to understand, personally speaking.

Gregory Thomas. November 30, 2013 Alameda St. Los Angeles, Calif.

LightBox: Tell us about your process creating the work. How do you approach these homeless veterans?

Pablo Unzueta: I carry two black trash bags with clothes in the back of my trunk and I drive around looking for homeless residents. If I don’t have clothes to give, I carry food and coins. This gives me a reason to approach them with a camera in hand. I [often] spark conversation with a simple handshake. If they open up to me, I’m usually allowed to take their portrait. Sometimes it takes a few visits for a picture, but that’s what makes the process all worth it. Most of my conversations are recorded on my iPhone, sometimes on a black notebook.

LightBox: Many photographers who started with analog or digital photography find themselves adapting to smartphones and Instagram. You started photographing at 17, and you are now 20. Can you call yourself an Instagram native? Do you find it liberating to be able to produce and distribute work instantaneously?

Pablo Unzueta: I think I can call myself that. I always loved Instagram. When I first started using it, I uploaded photographs from my DSLR. Every once in a while, I do a series with just iPhone photographs. I think it’s easy for someone to call themselves a photographer because of smartphones. But there is much more to it than just taking a picture with a phone. Going beyond your comfort zone and photographing something meaningful that contributes to a good cause automatically separates you from the category of “photographer”. It is important that we have a variety of documentarians in this world who present us with information, so why not use smartphones to illustrate the world with something informative and influential. Instagram is a perfect example of that. I am starting to see more and more Instagramers publish photographs with stories, which inspires others to do the same as well. It’s like a domino effect. Storytelling is imperative.


Pablo Unzueta is a freelance photojournalist in Los Angeles. He has been documenting protests, poverty and homelessness.

Ye Ming is a contributor to TIME LightBox. Follow her on Twitter and Instagram.


Sept. 24, 2014. Temple Street, Pomona, Calif. “One night we were in the air at about 500 ft., and we had to jump and land on this patch of grass. When I jumped, I landed on my ankle and shattered it. Half of my right leg is fiberglass,” Vietnam War veteran Rodney Farmer, 63, told Unzueta. After fixing his leg, Farmer went back to the infantry and fought for the U.S. for nine years.Pablo A. Unzueta
July 4, 2013. The Strip, Las Vegas. A disabled war veteran looks toward a crowd, hoping that someone passing by will give him spare change to help support his family.Pablo A. Unzueta
Sept. 24, 2014. Temple Street, Pomona, Calif. Rodney Farmer served nine years in the infantry as an airborne fighter. He has been sleeping in the streets for 14 months. He receives SSI (Supplemental Security Income) and gets my medical assistance from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).Pablo A. Unzueta
Nov. 28, 2013. Alameda Street, Los Angeles. Gregory Thomas, Vietnam War veteran, has been homeless since the 1980s. He sleeps a few dozen yards away the Arts District where gentrification has been highly effective in moving the homeless out of the area.Pablo A. Unzueta
Sept. 24, 2014. Temple Street, Pomona, Calif. Rodney Farmer shows his tattoo that he got in the military. It is a parachute jumper. "This tattoo represents who I was and what I had to do for my country," Farmer said.Pablo A. Unzueta
Aug. 10, 2014. Alameda Street, Los Angeles. Paul Johnson, 56, one of the “Peace Makers”, helps war veterans and people with a history of homelessness in the streets of Los Angeles. They are also known as “Buffalo Soldiers”, which refers to African American veterans. Johnson served in the military as a communications specialist during the Vietnam War. "I didn't like the military operations that were occurring during that time. It was pointless,” he told Unzueta. “Not only that, there are brothers out here who have served for the military and are sleeping outside on the streets.”Pablo A. Unzueta
Sept. 24, 2014. Temple Street, Pomona, Calif. Levi, a homeless veteran, got his tattoos during infantry in Vietnam. "These are important to me because it tells another side of me – my past," he told Unzueta.Pablo A. Unzueta
Sept. 24, 2014. Temple Street, Pomona, Calif. Levi, with shrapnel still in his body, receives no VA benefits or SSI. "Our scout team was in the front lines and a grenade went off. Shrapnel punctured my skin and entered just above my stomach. But no one gives a shit.,” Levi told Unzueta. “You're nothing after they use you to fight – on top of that we lost."Pablo A. Unzueta
Nov. 27, 2013. San Julian Street, Los Angeles. Billy, an injured Iraq War veteran, uses a walker to help him recover from a fractured hip.Pablo A. Unzueta
Nov. 30, 2013. Alameda Street, Los Angeles. Originally from Detroit, James has lived in Los Angeles for over year. He served in the infantry in Vietnam for several years. "I did my time, because I had to. Once that ended I found a job, but that didn't last long. I have been homeless for 20 or so years," he told Unzueta. “I see a lot of positive things happening for L.A., not for me though! I'm poor.”Pablo A. Unzueta

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