Valentina Blackhorse, Navajo Pageant Winner With Dreams, Dies at 28
She nurtured political aspirations while raising her 1-year-old daughter. Then she tested positive for the novel coronavirus. The next day she was dead.
ALBUQUERQUE Valentina Blackhorse, the winner of one pageant after another in the Navajo Nation, was known for helping others. When the coronavirus began tearing across her reservation, she counseled family members to stay home, wash their hands and wear masks.
Then the virus somehow made its way into her own home in Kayenta, a town in the Navajo Nation near the sandstone buttes of Arizonas Monument Valley. Her companion, Robby Jones, a detention officer with the Navajo Department of Corrections, caught Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus.
She cared for him until she got sick herself, her sister Vanielle said. She was always that way, looking after others.
When Ms. Blackhorse came down with symptoms including shortness of breath and back and knee pain, she went for a test. The results came back on April 22 and showed she was positive. A day later, Ms. Blackhorse died at Kayentas health clinic, where Mr. Jones had taken her after she had difficulty breathing, her sister said. She was 28.
Ms. Blackhorse, who worked as an assistant at the Dennehotso Chapter House, an administrative office, was among the Navajo Nations youngest and most prominent pandemic victims, and her death stunned many among her people. The reservation was already grappling with one of the deadliest outbreaks in rural America, with 1,977 confirmed cases of Covid-19 and 62 deaths from the infection as of Thursday, authorities said.
Ms. Blackhorse was born on Sept. 2, 1991, in Tuba City, Ariz., to Danny and Laverne Blackhorse. Her father was a coal miner, her mother a cook.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/30/obituaries/valentina-blackhorse-dead-coronavirus.html