
Two women comfort each other during a sharing session at Bethune House Migrant Women's Refuge, a shelter for abused domestic workers in Hong Kong. Xyza Cruz Bacani works as a maid six days a week and spends her day off documenting their stories in a series of black and white images.

Thousands of migrant workers work silently and invisibly in Hong Kong homes. Kuryati, a migrant worker from Indonesia, was accused of stealing. She rests after a stressful court hearing.

Shirley suffered third degree burns after a pot of hot soup was spilled on her back and arms. She moved into the shelter after her employer refused to grant her sick leave and terminated her contract. She has been jobless for six months and is pursuing a lawsuit with help from Legal Aid.

Shirley examines her scars. "When I see the girls, I talk to them, I absorb all their emotions and I can't really believe that some people can do that to other human beings," says Bacani.

Six bunk beds are crammed into a tiny apartment at Bethune House. The shelter provides a temporary home and meals for domestic workers who are victims of abuse.

Protesters slept on the tarmac during the early days of a pro-democracy protest in Hong Kong that lasted 11 weeks. Bacani says her outsider perspective helped her to capture the protest. "I'm there to document, to take photos, not to take sides," she said.

A protester snaps a photograph of Hong Kong policemen in riot gear with his smartphone. Bacani often moved to the front lines to document the Occupy protests. "It was the first time I saw this kind of passion," she said. "It gave this surreal vibe to the city."

A policeman attempts to get protesters off the streets in Mong Kong, a gritty, working-class neighborhood.

Bacani catches her reflection on a bus in Causeway Bay, one of Hong Kong's busiest shopping districts. She has lived in the city for nine years and still doesn't feel like she belongs. "When you're a helper, you don't have a right to be a photographer," she says.

Women wait outside Wild Cat Night Club on Lockhart Road in Wan Chai, Hong Kong's red-light district. Bacani spends six days a week cooking, cleaning and babysitting for an affluent Chinese family. On her day off, she wanders around the city capturing black and white scenes.

Bacani says her camera protects her from stereotyping and racism in a city that looks down on migrant workers.

"When I'm wearing my camera I'm not a helper anymore, I'm an ordinary girl." Bacani says. "It's a way of protection because when you're a helper here there is a kind of stereotyping that they do."

Bacani left the Philippines when she was 19 to work as a maid. She dropped out of nursing school so that her younger brother and sister could pursue their education.

Bacani hopes to become a photojournalist one day. For now, her job as a migrant domestic worker provides a stable source of income for her to support her brother and sister in the Philippines.


