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Bertha Zamudio
by Jackie Reid-Dettloff, photograph by Melody R. Carranza
“The Mexican on Pierce Street.”
Bertha Zamudio smiles at the title
her friends gave her when she first
moved to Riverwest.
From grade school in Mexico City
to high school in Chicago to college
in Racine to community organizing
on Milwaukee’s south side, Bertha
moved steadily northward for the
first 23 years of her life. But when her
first child was born, Bertha stopped
moving. She settled in a little house
on the 2900 block of North Pierce
in 1976 and she has been here ever
since.
Two life-long passions drew
Bertha to this neighborhood.
The first was her search for
healthy, unprocessed food. Way
back in the early 1970s when she was
living without a car on the south side,
Bertha used to make the trip across
the viaduct to shop at Outpost and
Gordon Park Co-op at Locust and
Bremen. “I have always tried to eat
good, natural foods” she says, and
she found what she was looking for
in Riverwest.
Thirty years later she is still
shopping at the corner of Locust
and Bremen, only now it is to buy
fresh produce from the Riverwest
Gardeners’ Market on Sunday
afternoons during the growing
season. Buying produce in an openair
market is what Bertha used to
do in Mexico. When the Market
shuts down for the winter, Bertha
shops more at the Riverwest Coop,
where she is a regular customer.
“I’m really happy that we have
another neighborhood co-op. I
like that it’s small and still has a lot
of good products. We all have to
make choices about what and how
we eat. I have practically become
a vegetarian. I find that I simply
cannot eat fast foods anymore. My
kids all know that so they never even
ask me anymore if I want something
from McDonald’s.”
The other passion that brought
Bertha to Riverwest was her belief
in education. She wanted to live near
the university. As one of 16 children,
Bertha spent most of her childhood
with an aunt who was a teacher in
Mexico City. “I learned from my
Auntie that you need to work hard
and develop your mind.” When
she came up to join her parents and
siblings in Chicago at age 18, she
spoke only Spanish. She enrolled
as a senior in a Catholic girls’ high
school so she could learn English.
Within a year she was doing well
enough to receive a scholarship to
Dominican College in Racine. She
studied there for two years.
In the summer of her sophomore
year Bertha came up to Milwaukee
to work with Hispanic youth on the
south side. She did so well that she
was nominated for a scholarship at
UWM, where she studied off and
on for more than twenty years.
She shrugs her shoulders when she
reflects on her long track record as a
college student. For many years she
had her hands full as a single mom of
three children. “At first I was waiting
for my kids to grow up and now I’m
waiting for them to finish college. I
am missing only a few more credits
to graduate, but that’s OK. I am very
happy.” Her daughter Xochitl has
worked for years at Warner Cable;
daughter Amada is finishing her
BA at Marquette and plans to go
to graduate school; son Bernardo
graduated from high school in June
and is studying at MATC. Bertha’s
older grandson Ivory is in eighth
grade; her younger grandson Jordan
just began kindergarten.
College diploma or no, Bertha
has spent most of her working life in
schools. She started with MPS in the
early years of La Escuela Fratney and
works there to this day. At first she
served as parent coordinator, which
was a job that suited her politics very
well. “ I think every school should
be aware that the school is not just
for the children but for the whole
community.” For the past decade,
she has served as teaching assistant
in Fratney’s kindergarten; she also
staffs the before- and after-school
program at the school. Through her
connections over the years at places
like the Latin American Union for
Civil Rights, the Catholic parishes of
St. Francis and Our Lady of Divine
Providence, Esperanza Unida, the
Aurora Weir Center, and Outpost
Natural Foods, Bertha is a natural
at networking between the Spanishspeaking
and English-speaking
communities.
Lately, the work that most
excites her is teaching adults at
South Division High School. Four
nights a week from 6 to 8, Bertha
serves the needs of Spanishspeaking
adults who want to learn
English through a program called
the Plaza Comunitaria. “I admire
those students. They get up at 4
o’clock in the morning and they go
to work. After work they go home
and wash up and get something to
eat and then they show up for class.
They have children to raise and so
much to do but still they come to
classes at night. The mothers come
and bring their children. Parents
cannot do anything unless there is
childcare provided, you know. Like
I say, I admire my students very, very
much.”
Probably Bertha admires her
students because she knows firsthand
what they have to deal with. From
her own experience she knows what
it takes to learn a new language and
raise a family in a new country. When
people ask her how she herself did it,
she smiles. “I got by with a lot of help
from my friends.”
Riverwest Currents online edition - November, 2006
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