• 7 months ago
The issue of homelessness—or being unhoused, or facing housing scarcity—isn’t something we often talk about when it comes to travel, unless it’s in a negative sense. In this episode, however, we’re going to meet a London-based tour company that’s working on bringing homelessness into the tourism narrative.

It’s called Unseen Tours, a nonprofit founded in 2010 by Jayni Gudka. It offers London tours that touch on many of the city’s most popular sites and neighborhoods—Soho, King’s Cross—with a twist: They’re led by individuals who were once homeless. But the tours are not poverty tourism. They’re history-rich, city-focused walking excursions led by people with a very special kind of knowledge.

Read the full transcript here: https://rebrand.ly/i5bqld2

Discover more episodes of the Unpacked by AFAR podcast here:
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Transcript
00:00 Hey everyone, and welcome to the third season of Unpacked, a podcast by afar.
00:04 I'm Aislinn, and as you can probably tell by this giant microphone in front of my face,
00:08 I host the show. Every week on the podcast, we unpack a different tricky topic in travel,
00:15 and this week is no exception. This is Unpacked.
00:29 I'm Aislinn Green, and this is Unpacked, the podcast that unpacks one tricky topic in travel
00:33 each week. And this week, we are exploring the intersection of travel and housing deprivation,
00:40 or as many refer to it, homelessness. It is a very tricky subject, but one that is close to my heart.
00:47 I have a close family member who has experienced homelessness, and I live in the Bay Area, which,
00:54 as you may know, has struggled under the weight of a certain narrative around the topic. In fact,
01:00 you may have seen recently that a TikTok star cut his trip to San Francisco short,
01:04 citing several issues, including safety. I'm not going to go deeply into the issue other than to
01:10 share my perspective, and that is that many parts of the city feel so alive and vibrant and safe,
01:16 although I do challenge us all to explore how and when and why we use the word safe. I know that it
01:22 can be scary and it can be uncomfortable when we encounter people who are altered or grappling with
01:28 mental illness or simply without the comforts that I know that I take for granted. But when we as
01:33 travelers avoid these feelings of discomfort, we're missing out on a larger story. There are
01:38 larger systemic issues at play here, and we're not going to solve them with travel. But let's at
01:43 least have the conversation. And that's what we're doing in this episode. We're going to meet a
01:47 walking tour company that is bringing homelessness into the tourism narrative. Our guide is Rachel
01:53 Parsons, a multimedia journalist and host of the solo travel series, The Peregrine Dame.
01:58 She splits her time between LA and London,
02:02 and that city is where she came across the groundbreaking work of Unseen Tours.
02:12 Here at St. Giles in the fields, this was literally a field, and it was where people
02:21 came and they were hung, drawn, and quartered. For my money, there's no better way to spend a
02:27 couple of hours in a new city than a good walking tour, especially one that reminds me I'm lucky to
02:34 be alive in an era where I'm unlikely to be publicly eviscerated. I love a little history.
02:40 He became a doctor for Henry VIII simply because he was found with three women. Because, of course,
02:48 you know, he'd become a monk, and monks aren't supposed to be with women. A little architecture.
02:58 St. Patrick's Church was no, not a church. It was actually a house. It was called Carlisle House.
03:06 There's another Carlisle House over there, but this was a slightly dodgier one.
03:12 And London is chock full of them. Not dodgy houses, though there are still plenty of those around.
03:19 I mean walking tours, food tours, pub tours, architecture tours, history tours, street art
03:25 tours, and of course the ubiquitous Jack the Ripper tours in the once gritty and dark East End.
03:32 But I'm in the bright lights and polished, if commercialized, refinement of the West End.
03:37 I'm joining guide Nick Shaw on one of her tours of the Soho and St. Giles districts.
03:43 Soho is London's notorious nightlife hub. Opulent theaters and flat-faced Victorian brick buildings
03:51 squeeze narrow sidewalks, forcing pedestrians onto equally narrow streets, the pavement of
03:57 which covers most of the old cobbles. Once a den of iniquity, today Soho and St. Giles are known
04:03 more for cheesy clubs and expensive restaurants than public executions. London's queer community
04:09 also has deep roots in Soho. Nick stops in front of a door with an ornate knocker on a quiet
04:15 pedestrian path called Flitcroft Street. In 1935, it was the door to Billy's, a gay members club.
04:23 Homosexual behavior being illegal, Billy's and the caravan club not far away were under heavy
04:29 secret police surveillance. This is just two. Goodness knows how many there were.
04:37 And they were open for about a year and then the government came along and said,
04:47 "This is Satan's work. We have to close these places." And they did. What followed were aggressive
04:57 raids by the metropolitan police and lengthy trials and sentences for scores of customers
05:03 and club owners. We're all contemplating historical social injustice when Nick,
05:08 who's been leading tours since 2018, takes this moment to seg into some history of a
05:15 personal nature. The only reason that I got a decent home was because I was in hostels, but then
05:27 I was put in this charity called Broadway, put me in with a girl, woman, sorry, who was,
05:40 just come out of rehab. She'd been on heroin. If this seems a bit non sequitur for a history
05:52 walking tour, it's because Nick is a guide with unseen tours. It's a social enterprise
05:58 in London that hires people who were previously homeless. Nick Shaw spent about 12 years as one
06:04 of the thousands of hidden homeless in this city, bouncing from hostel to hostel. Janie Goodka,
06:10 the organization's CEO, tells me that unseen tours guides have lived through a range of homelessness,
06:16 including living on the streets, known in Britain as sleeping rough. One note on the sound. Janie
06:24 has agreed to meet me on a particularly miserable rainy day, even for London, and we've had to tuck
06:29 away in a noisy coffee shop. So our tour guides, some have been rough sleeping in London for many
06:38 years. Some have not experienced that form of homelessness, but they've experienced hidden
06:43 homelessness. They may have had hospital stays, which left them homeless afterwards. We didn't
06:50 have somewhere to go after this, Denton Hospital. They may have slept in cars when they were
06:58 displaced from wherever they were staying, but they may have had like relationships break down,
07:03 and that may have led them to being homeless, staying in hostels, couch surfing sometimes.
07:08 So it does vary quite a bit, and I think that's something we're keen to raise awareness about
07:14 through our tours. To be clear, this is not poverty tourism, and unseen tours does not
07:20 hire guides who are still homeless. Instead, Janie says if someone comes to them who's unhoused,
07:26 the first order of business is to work with partner organizations to get a roof over their
07:30 head before training starts. On her tour, Nick shares how she finally got into stable housing.
07:36 Sometime around 2010, she can't quite remember, and that ended a dozen years of living one night
07:43 to the next. She had help from social workers before finding unseen tours, and I will get back
07:49 to that. But to understand her path out of homelessness, it's important to understand
07:55 her journey into it. Before the tour, Nick invited me to her apartment, where we can talk
08:00 away from the noise of the street. It's in a neat public housing complex with a lush green courtyard
08:06 and common garden on the edge of St. Giles. Her living room is overflowing with history books.
08:12 There are stacks on the shelves, on the floor, on the tables. The walls are a vivid deep green
08:19 and coordinate with Nick's green jacket, green jewelry, and green fingernail polish. At 67 and
08:27 sober, Nick says she knows no one would look at her and think she'd been homeless. You're always
08:33 going to get people think, "Oh, if you're now homeless, look at them. They're just grounded."
08:40 But people don't understand the situation. They really haven't a clue how things can change,
08:49 and this is what I kind of start my tour saying. You never know. You just don't know what's gonna
08:57 happen in life. You start, everything's fine and lovely, and you've got this and you've got that.
09:04 Things don't always work out. Nick was born in 1956 in northwest England. She became a nurse,
09:14 got married young, and had two children. From the outside, everything looked fine.
09:19 And also people say they're fine, don't they? "Oh, I'm fine. How are you, Rachel? Oh, I'm fine."
09:28 Do you know what it stands for? ****ed up, insecure, nervous, and emotional. That is what
09:35 it stands for, and it's true quite often, but we all kind of got a mix smelling up this.
09:41 In Nick's case, the smile couldn't hide the bruises. Her husband was physically and
09:46 psychologically abusive. She eventually left him. Time passed, and she met someone new,
09:53 and for a number of years found love and stability. She was still nursing and studying
09:58 criminology part-time. Then one day she came home from work and found her partner dead.
10:04 Painful years of past trauma and new loss manifested as mental illness,
10:10 and eventually alcohol addiction. "Really things just fell apart. My sister said come and live with
10:19 me, and then he stood it. So I went to live with her, but my head was screwed." But back then,
10:29 Nick says, her sister in London couldn't cope and didn't understand the depth of Nick's problems.
10:35 She asked Nick to move out. With nowhere to go, Nick found a bed in a hostel that catered to the
10:42 down-and-out, homeless, and people in the throes of addiction. She continued to work as a nurse.
10:48 In fact, she held paying jobs and volunteer positions throughout her time unhoused,
10:52 though she says much of her income went to alcohol.
10:56 Nick Shaw was 42 when she moved into that hostel and became homeless.
11:02 "But, say homeless, but then there's lost, feeling lost, just feeling lost.
11:11 It can be quite different. I feel like I was homeless a lot longer than I was,
11:18 really, simply because I didn't have my own place, you know, just a cool mind."
11:26 She pauses and looks around her green sitting room. "So this is my first ever,
11:34 I created my own home. This is my first own bed, first own floor, you know, it's all these little
11:45 things. It's about something being your own." Helping guides reclaim that sense of ownership
11:54 in their professional lives as well is a cornerstone of Unseen Tours' mission.
11:59 But it's also about representation and visibility in the tourism business,
12:04 an industry that does its best to render people living through homelessness invisible.
12:08 As CEO Janie Goodka points out, who better to illustrate the fullness of lived experience in
12:15 a place? "If they've been sleeping on the streets, they know the streets better than anyone.
12:20 They know the interesting personalities better than anyone." And they know the stories they
12:27 want to tell. Janie says staff and volunteers work with guides on things like building confidence and
12:33 public speaking, but are careful not to interfere with the essence of the guide's story. "So we're
12:38 really keen to make sure that the people that we work with are able to share their stories
12:46 in their own voices, without putting words in their mouth, without telling them what they should
12:49 be saying and how they should be portraying homelessness, because it's their individual
12:53 experiences, their own unique experiences. And of course, everyone experiences homelessness very
12:58 differently." Which is why each guide shares as much or as little of their background as they
13:04 choose. And that brings me back to Nyx. 99% of her two-hour tour is history and culture,
13:11 but she shares her transition out of homelessness to highlight the holes in the safety net.
13:17 Remember, she'd been sleeping in hostels for about 12 years when her social workers found
13:22 her roommate and put them in public housing. The woman's name was Lana. "She'd been on
13:29 heroin. She'd been out of rehab for four weeks. I joined her. I've never done drugs. Drink, yeah.
13:39 Drugs, no." Lana quickly fell back into her heroin addiction. Things got dangerous when
13:47 acquaintances of Lana's started coming around the apartment at all hours trying to kick in the door.
13:52 Nyx caseworkers knew they had to get her out. They helped Nyx into an apartment of her own.
13:59 "And Lana has not been seen for 11 years, so she's probably dead. And what she said,
14:10 it was only because of Lana, the situation with Lana, they got me out, which is awful.
14:22 It seems I was the last person to see her." Although things turned out in Nyx's favour,
14:29 it could have easily gone differently because homelessness in London has only increased in
14:34 the last decade, straining the city's support system. Liz McCulloch is policy and research
14:40 manager at St Mungo's, a non-profit homeless services organisation. "The most recent annual
14:46 data we have showed that there were 10,053 people sleeping rough in London, so that was a 21%
14:55 increase from the previous year." That's more than 10,000 people sleeping on the street.
15:00 But like Nyx, thousands more don't show up in the numbers. With hidden homelessness, Liz says,
15:06 there's no way to know for sure. "But the problem with hidden homelessness is that it encompasses
15:11 people who basically fall through the gaps of the system. So it's people who are sofa surfing,
15:18 it's people who are maybe are sleeping in a secure place, maybe in a squat at night,
15:25 and then during the day, they maybe ride public transport. And so these groups aren't being
15:30 necessarily picked up as a specific group by statistics. We need to think about the hidden
15:35 homeless group in order to effectively tackle rough sleeping, because these are essentially
15:39 people who are on the verge of sleep rough."
15:44 There's little that tourism professionals, and frankly a lot of travellers, are more allergic
15:58 to than the sight of people sleeping on the street, especially in a glamorous destination
16:03 such as London, where tourism rakes in tens of billions of dollars a year. "In our experience,
16:09 people who've experienced homelessness are usually excluded from the tourism narrative.
16:14 So if we think back to the London Olympics, or the royal wedding of Harry and Meghan,
16:21 people who were homeless were displaced from the areas in which these events were taking place,
16:26 because London or the UK in general didn't want to be seen as having this problem of homelessness.
16:33 When the world was watching." And it's not just London, it happens everywhere. I've witnessed it
16:38 firsthand in cities as far-flung as Los Angeles, Rio and Manila, when a large sporting event
16:44 president or pope appears. "And so obviously at Unseen Tours we think this is a missed opportunity,
16:49 and it's a shame, because the insights that people have when they've been rough sleeping,
16:53 or just been homeless in a community, like the new perspectives and the different
17:00 quirky facts that they have about a community, just not something that
17:04 are usually seen in walking tours or in the tourism industry." So Nick and her colleagues
17:10 understand the multi-layered context of their tour sites like few others. They also have a firm grasp
17:17 of factual history. In Soho, Nick leads us to one of her favorite stops, Soho Square. She points out
17:25 number 21, which she says in the 19th century contributed to Soho's infamous reputation for
17:31 naughtiness. "They bought this place and they made it into the Machiko town, or the White House,
17:43 or various other names. It was a brothel." They were high society dominatrix Teresa Barkley and
17:54 a business partner. She's said to have invented the Barkley horse, a BDSM whipping rack. The upper
18:01 crust of society and nobility were willing to pay Barkley handsomely for her absolute discretion
18:07 and her cat o' nine tails. As a letter from one of Teresa's prospective clients makes clear,
18:13 Nick reads it to us. "Pound sterling for the first blood drawn, two pounds sterling if the blood runs
18:21 down to my heels, three pounds sterling if my heels are bathed in blood, four pounds sterling
18:28 if the blood reaches the floor, and five pounds sterling if you succeed in making me lose
18:33 consciousness." "Wow." "Exactly, but I mean if that's what you want, that's what you want."
18:43 Nick's tour is all about history, but Janie says each guide curates their tour based on
18:49 their interests and they have plenty of assistance from staff throughout that preparation.
18:54 "It's a very bespoke process, so we work with the guides on a one-to-one basis. It can take between
19:03 three months to I think 21 months was the longest time to develop one tour." "That was Nick's by the
19:08 way." "But it's their tour and they own it, so it's the stories that they're most passionate about,
19:14 both from their own experiences and the communities around them." A large part of the process is
19:19 providing support services. Nick took nearly two years to create her tour to really learn the
19:25 history of her patch, but also to build the self-assurance needed to get in front of strangers.
19:30 "The challenges that people with experience of homelessness have can vary so much. So some people
19:35 may need some more support with mental health, mental well-being, trauma they may have experienced
19:40 when they were homeless. Some people may have lost their confidence because they felt invisible when
19:45 they were experiencing homelessness. So how can we change that to help someone build up their
19:51 self-confidence, their self-worth, help them with public speaking skills, other skills they may need
19:58 to create their walking tours. But also we find that the people we work with are just fantastic
20:04 storytellers. They have really interesting stories to tell, not just of their own experiences, but
20:09 also stories about London, stories of the community that they live in and they know so well." Since
20:14 Unseen Tours started in 2010, 24 guides have hosted more than 25,000 tourists throughout London.
20:22 The organisation is developing plans to expand to other cities in the UK and abroad.
20:27 Janie says in the end she hopes the tours spark a deeper dialogue between customers and guides.
20:34 "Just to help have conversations about homelessness with people who often just don't
20:39 have a chance to speak about these topics and who may have kind of stereotypes or stigmas that they
20:46 personally associate with homelessness, their own prejudices for example. So having these
20:51 conversations in quite an open, frank manner." For Nick Shaw, her tours are about piercing the
20:58 glitzy veneer of London's West End, especially of those who live in it. "Just don't believe what you
21:06 see. Just because somebody looks okay, people put on such a facade." "In the years that I've been
21:14 travelling to and living in London, I've seen its facade crack as homelessness worsens and the holes
21:20 in the safety net stretch. I've always believed as a traveller I have a responsibility to see the
21:26 full spectrum of a place, warts and all, to understand it in its context. I believe shutting
21:33 my eyes to the ugliest aspects of a place does me and the destination a grave disservice."
21:37 Walking through Soho with our small group, I have a deep sense of admiration for Nick Shaw,
21:44 for the strength it takes to stand in front of total strangers and talk about the worst years
21:49 of her life three times a week, for her willingness to be vulnerable and for her resilience, for her
21:55 insistence on being seen and acknowledged, and compassion for all those she represents who remain
22:02 unseen. And that was Rachel Parsons. We'll link to her work in the show notes as well as to Unseen
22:12 Tours. And when they expand to other cities, we will be sure to let you know. And if you take a
22:18 tour with them, be sure to let us know. Love to know what you think. Next week, we'll be back with
22:23 our first Unpacking episode of the season, this one exploring all things Albuquerque, New Mexico.
22:28 Ready for more unpacking? Visit afar.com and be sure to follow us on Instagram and
22:34 @AfarMedia. If you enjoyed today's exploration, I hope you'll come back for more great stories.
22:41 Subscribing always makes that easy. And be sure to rate and review the show on your favorite podcast
22:46 platforms - it helps other travelers find it. And if you ever want to ask a question or suggest a
22:52 topic for coverage, you can reach out to us at afar.com/feedback or email us at unpacked@afar.com.
22:58 This has been Unpacked, a production of Afar Media. The podcast is produced by Aislinn Green
23:04 and Nikki Galteland. Music composition by Chris Collin. And remember, the world is complicated.
23:11 We're here to help you unpack it. Okay, that was our show. Don't forget to hit like and subscribe
23:21 on your way out. And I'll include a link to the podcast below.
23:24 [Music]
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