I am sure Arne will be able to give good advice here, and I believe the mast position you have chosen (through the forward hatch) will quite possibly suit one of Arne's Johanna variants, and satisfy your needs, so what I am suggesting here is probably just for academic interest.
I am basing this on the bermudan sail plan for the Alacrity 19, according to "SaiboatData.com". A VERY rough eye-ball calculation of the centre of area of the designed bermudan rig is shown in the first part of the diagram. (I don't have CAD software so don't take this as 100% accurate).
Just for fun, let us consider a Split Junk Rig.
I am more and more confident now of the rule of thumb given by Slieve McGalliard - that is: the centre of area (CE) for a split junk rig (SJR) should coincide with the centre of area of a correctly placed bermudan rig. This allows us to impose a split junk rig onto the drawing without having to go back to first principles and calculate the geometric centre of the underwater hull (CLR). Because the SJR requires the sail to have a mast balance of 33% it is now possible to derive the correct mast position for the this particular rig. As you can see from the second part of the diagram, this derivation places the mast between the cabin and the fore hatch, just a few inches forward of the original mast position. (The sail shown here is the Amiina Mk2 designed by Slieve).
If this is a more convenient position for your mast, then you might want to consider a low yard-angle high mast-balance rig such as the SJR.
(My personal opinion is that this rig might suit your boat quite well - it's pretty well-proven now, and the mast position looks to me to require no changes to the standard interior layout and would allow you to retain the forward hatch. You might like to scroll down through the "Boat of the Month" archive here, until you come to Feb 2022, and have a look at Amiina.)
I have no doubt a Johanna rig will suit your boat very well too. The McGalliard rule of thumb may not apply exactly to Arne's suite of Johanna rigs - I am not sure - but the high yard-angle/lower mast-balance of these rigs will need the mast position further forward than the Amiina Mk2 sail we see here. For modern conventional junk rigs, the lower the mast-balance, the higher the yard angle, and the further forward the mast needs to be placed. This makes me feel confident that one of Arne's sail plans will most likely suit your proposed mast position through the fore hatch area.
PS: The split junk rig is an extreme high mast-balance rig, and places the mast as far aft as a junk rig mast could possibly be placed on a single mast configuration. This gives you one end of the spectrum of possible mast positions. My guess is that somewhere around the centre of the fore hatch is probably the extreme other end of the spectrum of possible junk rig mast positions for your boat. A suitable junk sail type can be drawn which will be in harmony with any chosen mast position between these two points.
PPS: "mast-balance" is a term coined by Arne which conveniently describes the ratio: (area of sail profile ahead of the mast centre line) divided by (total area of sail profile)
Edit: that SJR sail I imposed onto the Alacrity 19 sail plan drawing might want to be scaled down in size just a little, it looks like slightly too much sail area, on second glance. That is easily done and won't really affect this discussion on mast position.
You most certainly can make your own sail and I would recommend you do so.
Amiina racing with her Mk 1 Split Junk Rig
The above sail was professionally made and although it was strongly built and is obviously pushing the boat along very well - as you can see from the photo it is not a particularly good example of a well cut modern cambered junk sail.
The Mk 2 (below) was home made.