Who We Are
Since April of 2023, we have provided over 600 reproductive health kits throughout San Antonio via community events, mail service, and hand delivery.
Our Mission
Black Book Sex Ed’s mission is to reduce the extraction of individual experience by listening to our community, not to respond, but to understand the urgent need of sexual liberation, reproductive justice and communal care. Black Book Sex Ed centers the healing of Non-Binary, Queer, Non-Conforming and Femme Presenting Black individuals who desperately need access to being believed, safe, effective health care and a safe-space to exist.
Our Vision
Our vision is to remain in the weeds of ‘grassroots efforts’, our unapologetic resistance is within our vision to fearlessly provide access to reproductive health care, gender-identity, reduce stigma surrounding pleasure/mutual aid, in order to access safer and healthier futures for our community. Our radical vision is equity, unity and love for sacred individuals who deserve access to resources.
Meet the Team
Limya Harvey (she/her)
Co-Founder
Limya Harvey is a student advocate for racial, reproductive, and LGBTQIA+ justice. Limya is motivated by personal experiences growing up in a marginalized community that lacked access to adequate resources. These passions, sparked Black Book Sex Ed, a community-based organization whose mission is to increase the accessibility of sexual health products and education. As a Co-Founder of this grassroots organization in San Antonio, Texas, she actively works within the community by providing free reproductive health kits and education surrounding the topic of sexual health to aid in the destigmatization of its discussion.
Cydney Mumford (she/they)
Co-Founder
Cydney, a student studying biology, actively advocates for minority communities and addresses disparities within them, specifically relating to access to sexual health resources and the quality of sex education. With the desire to address such issues, Black Book Sex Ed was created as a means of meeting their community where they are at, and providing those in need with free contraception and menstrual kits as well as education to shift the stigma surrounding sexual and reproductive health in lower-income minority communities.