Season 4, Episode 9: Erika Prosper
Some mujeres you meet become instant friends; others step naturally into a role of cariño y
cuidado — a comadre. As the mics went live, I was engulfed by La Erika’s powerful presence,
one that could be immediately recognized and held in reverence. Our culturally rooted plática
felt like the kind that has unfolded at sobremesas across the world. Conversations about the
elevation of la mujer en su poder. In San Antonio’s former First Lady, Erika Prosper ‘la mera
jefa’ in embodied action y palabra, I encountered not simply a civic leader, but a mujer deeply
anchored in el campo, memoria, and community. I opened with the question, “Who is Erika
Prosper?” From that moment, the room shifted — a comida laid out before us, homemade
picadillo y tortillas on the table. What unfolded was not a formal interview, but mera plática. We
journeyed back to her beginnings in the fields of South Texas, where el campo first shaped her
hands, her ganas, and her understanding of dignity in labor. She spoke of migrant roots not as
hardship alone, but as a living archive of resilience carried in the body and spirit. El mero campo
‘el mero maestro’ guiding her toward becoming a cultural steward of San Antonio de Béjar.
Our conversation moved through the layered soul of Yanaguana, San Antonio as sacred ground,
indigenous inheritance, migrant corridor, artistic sanctuary. We reflected on literacy as
liberation, not merely the reading of books, but the expansion of self, culture, and empowerment.
The ability to reclaim one’s story. To shape destiny. La Erika, una mujerona. Throughout our sitdown, she honored and elevated women, reminding us that resilience is not accidental; it is
cultivated through conviction y comunidad. Her tenure as First Lady was not mere duty, but
stewardship. For the people, by the people. I walked away from our conversation feeling
empowered in comunidad and reaffirmed in palabra. Our exchange was a reminder that cultural
conviction, when paired with literacy, cariño, and persistent labor, becomes un legado, living
legacy en acción y palabra viva.