BCVoices Inc.

in A Woman’s View

AAPI Heritage Month – Peggy Saika

In honor of Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Month, BC Voices is proud to highlight Peggy Saika, an Asian American feminist activist involved in many social justice causes, including the fight for reproductive justice.

Peggy Saika was born in an Arizona internment camp in 1945, where three generations of her family were incarcerated because of their Japanese ancestry. In the late 1960s and ‘70s, in her hometown of Sacramento, Saika helped set up the first Asian community organization which focused on the needs of seniors and immigrants. In 1978, she moved to New York City, worked at Chinatown Health Clinic, and joined the Organization of Asian Women, a multigenerational collective of API feminists. During this seminal time, she was among feminist API activists who lived the contradiction of working against sexism in the API movement, and struggling with racism in the women’s movement.

She returned to California in 1983 to become the Executive Director of the Asian Law Caucus, one of the pre-eminent legal and civil rights organizations serving API communities. During this period, Peggy co-founded Asian Pacific Islanders for Choice (APIC), later named Asian Pacific Islanders for Reproductive Health (APIRH) and the National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum (NAPAWF), organizations that provided what she called “an explicitly pro-choice vehicle to inject [API] voices into the movement.”

These organizations have not only given API women a presence in the pro-choice movement, they have also used a reproductive justice framework to organize around a multitude of issues that particularly affect API women. Some of these issues include immigrants’ rights, sex trafficking, affordable and adequate health insurance, medical services in the language of the patient, traditional birthing practices, and the impact of the environment on women’s reproductive health.

Continuing to bring an API perspective to social justice work, but always through a gender lens, Peggy was co-founding director of Asia Pacific Environmental Network, served as Executive Director of Asian Americans/ Pacific Islanders in Philanthropy and has been CEO of Common Counsel, which focuses on community-oriented philanthropy for progressive social movements.

We honor Peggy Saika’s decades-long fight for women in the API community, which encompasses more than 60 ethnic and national groups. With language and cultural barriers still in place, poverty, and limited access to health care and health information, recent threats to reproductive rights in the U.S. leave some API women especially vulnerable.
This makes it all the more important that we heed the voices of AAPI women in our conversations on reproductive healthcare in the U.S.

In Stand UP, Speak OUT Episode 3: Reproductive Rights – Birth Control, two Asian American women, Patria Baradi Pacis and Ivee Cruz, share their experiences with contraception. We hope you’ll take the time to watch the video now.


in Reviews

lady liberty walking across the USA map Stand Up Speak Out the personal politics of women's rights

Enthusiastic viewers at FEEDBACK Female Film Festival

“I loved this. This was spectacular…. I loved everything about it. I think everyone needs to see it.”

“Stand UP, Speak OUT is a really amazing documentary about the rise and development of feminism over the 20th century.”

“I feel like it is really important and I’m eager to see what else can come from this group of creators.”

Watch more viewer responses to the Docuseries Introduction from Stand UP, Speak OUT: The Personal Politics of Women’s Rights. Our 8-minute historical overview 200+ Years – American Women Fight and Rise was an Official Selection in the 2021 FEEDBACK Female Film Festival, produced by Wildsound TV.

Watch what they watched…


in Reviews

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Ms. Magazine 11/18/2020

“The Stand UP, Speak OUT series did a phenomenal job encompassing the progression of intersectional feminism throughout recent decades. As a student, it’s refreshing to not only hear the narratives that are often left out of curricula, but to truly connect with them through personal accounts.

SUSO’s interviews are authentic and intimate, and refuse to sugarcoat the reality of prejudice. By telling a story that every young woman can see herself in, BC Voices demonstrates the power of diverse experiences, and their immense impact on the strength of a movement.”

Sophie Dorf-Kamienny, Tufts 2025, Ms. Magazine intern


in A Woman’s View

everyone knows & loves someone who has had an abortion

A Stunning Blow to Women’s Reproductive Heath & Justice!

In a blow to women’s reproductive health and justice, a leaked draft majority opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization makes it clear the Supreme Court will overturn Roe v. Wade. The constitutional right to privacy and the liberty interest of the 14th Amendment, the legal underpinnings of Roe, are now at risk in all aspects of women’s reproductive lives. Although Roe is embedded in the middle of a hundred years of jurisprudence which the Planned Parenthood v. Casey court calls the “realm of personal liberty that the government can’t enter,” it appears the Court is disregarding these precedential decisions.

In fact, an ominous aspect of the leaked draft opinion by Justice Alito is its repudiation of the legal analysis of the constitutional right to privacy and guarantee of personal liberty as “egregiously wrong.” Employing the reasoning in the draft Dobbs opinion, the Supreme Court lays the groundwork for states, not people, to make decisions about whom to marry, how to raise your kids, the use of contraception, and the ability to terminate a pregnancy.

As soon as the US Supreme Court overrules Roe v. Wade, the right to decide to have an abortion will be banned in over half the states, and criminalized in many. Louisiana has already proposed that abortion be classified as homicide. 13 states have trigger laws ready in place.

What is it like for women when abortions are illegal? the vast majority of people living in the US have never known abortion to be outright banned as a crime. They have no reference point of not being able to make a life-altering personal decision that had always been their fundamental right. In Stand UP, Speak OUT Episode 3: Reproductive Rights – Abortion, three women spanning three generations, from differing socio-economic backgrounds, share their experiences before and after abortion was legalized in 1973 – discovering their contraception had failed, and, facing the options available to them.

“May no one ever know what it was like to have an illegal abortion,” says one woman.

Watch the full stories in Stand UP, Speak OUT


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