“You can create a film,” director Chris Temple shares at MCON 2016 in Washington, D.C., “but if it doesn’t actually inspire any change or drive any action, what’s the point?”

Along with Zach Ingrasci, Temple took to Reddit last week to raise awareness about their latest film, Salam Neighbor, which was recently released on Netflix and covers the Syrian refugee crisis with an inside look at one of the camps.

“We traveled to the Syrian border,” Ingrasci and Temple write in their Reddit AMA (Ask Me Anything), “to live with 85,000 Syrian refugees in Jordan’s Za’atari camp.”

With Salam Neighbor, they aimed to create “an intimate look at the heartbreak and hope on the frontlines of the world’s most dire refugee crisis.”

But to get the story behind the film, redditors asked the documentarians questions about their process, what they discovered while taping Salam Neighbor, and how the filmmakers can “bring home the severity of the problems” they witnessed at the Za’atari refugee camp.

Here are a few of the top answers from their AMA. To read all of their answers to redditors’ questions, check out the full discussion in Reddit’s IAmA community.

Most Unexpected Experience

“Bringing Home” What They Saw

Single Most-Needed Resource

Favorite Part of the Experience?

What They Want Everyone to Know About the Refugee Process

Salam Neighbor is available for streaming on Netflix now.