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Pinoy Abroad

Pinay domestic helper in HK gets scholarship in NYU


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(Updated 12:18 p.m., January 23) Filipina domestic helper Xyza Cruz Bacani, known for her striking black and white photos of Hong Kong life, is going to New York as a scholar.

This was after Magnum Foundation announced Thursday that the 27-year-old Bacani has been chosen as one of its seven Human Rights Fellows for 2015. [Click here for samples of her work.]

Bacani couldn't hide her excitement upon learning the news.

“All dreams are valid!,” she said on Facebook. “I'm one of the 2015 Magnum Fellows! I'm going to see New York and finally [have] a formal education!”

She added that she was “literally crying” when she heard the news.

According to its website, Magnum Foundation “champions in-depth, independent documentary photography that fosters empathy, engagement, and positive social change.”

Beyond providing scholarships, the foundation also “continues to mentor and support these regional photographers when possible through editorial advice, introductions to photo editors, and in some cases, helping to facilitate independent freelance work with prominent, international media networks.”

Its coursework is developed in collaboration with New York University's Tisch School for the Arts.

Aside from Bacani, other fellows are Basel Alyazouri, 19, Palestine; Nour Kelze, 27, Syria; Sipho Mpongo, 21, South Africa; Chery Dieu Nalio, 33, Haiti; Anastasia Vlasova, 22, Ukraine; and Muyi Xiao, 23, China.

A June 18, 2014 article on the New York Times said Bacani, who grew up in Nueva Vizcaya,  uses her overtime pay to fund her photography hobby, buying lenses, cameras and film.

Bacani is a second-generation domestic helper serving the same woman who has employed her mother for 20 years.

Stark photography

Bacani’s stark photography came into recognition sometime in July 2014 when she posted them on her Facebook site as well as in street photography groups on line.

Her different style of photography focused on the residents of Hong Kong where she works as a nanny for a family during daytime and a nocturnal stalker with a camera during her free time. She also documented the plight of Filipino domestic helpers in the former Crown Colony.

Discovering her potentials, documentary photographer Rick Rocamora recommended her works to the New York Times Lens Blog, which featured her early black and white images. Since then, several newspapers in HK and online news organizations, including TIME, featured her.

Bacani was featured on "I-Witness" in October 2014 where Howie Severino and his team followed her as she snapped photos of the ongoing protest there, and also on "News To Go" and, recently, CNN. Later, Bacani moved on to do several photo exhibits in Hong Kong and Manila, a fete few aspiring photographers can accomplish in so short a span of time.

It was in one those exhibits that she was introduced to several veteran Magnum photographers who took her works seriously. —with Joe Galvez/KBK, GMA News