Maria Cerda was a trailblazer.
In the 1960s, she became the first Latina member of the Chicago Board of Education and a strong advocate for bilingual classes.

Maria Cerda (Courtesy of the Cerda family)

Maria Cerda, center, and her husband David Cerda. (Courtesy of the Cerda family)

From left: David Cerda with granddaughter Amalia, son David Cerda and wife Maria Cerda. (Courtesy of the Cerda family)
Cerda hopes people remember his mother as a trailblazer. She was a catalyst for Chicago becoming a sanctuary city, he said.
While being dropped off by a chauffeur outside of her office, Cerda said immigration officers confronted his mother and started harassing her. The officers were not aware that Puerto Ricans are citizens of the United States, he said.
“She thought, ‘If this could happen to me, imagine what could happen to someone that’s less powerful than me,’” he said. “Then she went to Harold Washington and he immediately agreed that that was going to stop.”
Cerda said he’s appalled by people who are not following COVID-19 restrictions. While vaccines could be coming soon, people still need to be careful because of the damage the virus causes, he said.
“When my parents got infected, we saw the case count go up,” Cerda said. “Well, now my parents are those statistics.”










