The Denver Post

Ex-navajo president guided by love for people, family

- By Felicia Fonseca

Peterson Zah, a monumental Navajo Nation leader who guided the tribe through a politicall­y tumultuous era and worked tirelessly to correct wrongdoing­s against Native Americans, has died.

Zah died late Tuesday at a hospital in Fort Defiance, Ariz., after a lengthy illness, Navajo President Buu Nygren’s office said. He was 85.

Zah was the first president elected on the Navajo Nation — the largest tribal reservatio­n in the U.S. — in 1990 after the government was restructur­ed into three branches to prevent power from being concentrat­ed in the chairman’s office. At the time, the tribe was reeling from a deadly riot incited by Zah’s political rival, former Chairman Peter MacDonald, a year earlier.

Zah vowed to rebuild the tribe and to support families and education, speaking with people in ways that imparted mutual respect, said his longtime friend Eric Eberhard. Zah was as comfortabl­e putting on dress clothes to represent Navajos in Washington, D.C., as he was driving his old pickup around the reservatio­n and sitting on the ground, listening to people who were struggling, he said.

“People trusted him, they knew he was honest,” Eberhard said Tuesday.

Aspiring politician­s on and off the Navajo Nation sought Zah’s advice and endorsemen­t. He rode with Hillary Clinton in the Navajo Nation parade a month before Bill Clinton was elected president. Zah later campaigned for Hillary Clinton in her bid for the presidency.

He recorded countless campaign advertisem­ents over the years in the Navajo language that aired on the radio, mostly siding with Democrats. But he made friends with Republican­s, too, including the late Arizona U.S. Sen. John McCain, whom he endorsed in the 2000 presidenti­al election as someone who could work across the aisle.

Zah was born in December 1937 in remote Low Mountain, a section of the reservatio­n embroiled in a decades-long land dispute with the neighborin­g Hopi Tribe that resulted in the relocation of thousands of Navajos and hundreds of Hopis. He attended boarding school, graduating from the Phoenix Indian School, and rejected notions that he wasn’t suited for college, Eberhard said.

Zah attended community college then Arizona State University on a basketball scholarshi­p. He earned a degree in education. He went on to teach carpentry and other vocational skills on the reservatio­n. He later cofounded a federally funded legal advocacy organizati­on that served Navajos, Hopis and Apaches that still exists today

espite never having held an elected position, Zah captured the tribal chairman’s post in 1982, campaignin­g in a white, battered 1950s Internatio­nal pickup that he fixed up himself, drove for decades and that became a symbol of his low-key style, Eberhard said.

Under Zah’s leadership, the tribe establishe­d a now multibilli­on- dollar Permanent Fund in 1985 after winning a court battle with Kerr Mcgee that found the tribe had the authority to tax companies that extract minerals from the 27,000 square- mile eservation. All coal, pipeline, oil and gas leases were renegotiat­ed, which increased payments to the tribe. A portion of that money is added annually to the Permanent Fund.

Zah sometimes was referred to as the Native American Robert Kennedy because of his charisma, ideas and ability to get things done, including lobbying federal officials to ensure Native Americans could use peyote as a religious sacrament, his longtime friend Charles Wilkinson said last year.

Zah also worked to ensure Native Americans were reflected in federal environmen­tal laws such as the Clean Water Act and the Clean Air Act.

Zah told The Associated Press in January 2022 that respecting people’s difference­s was key to maintainin­g a sense of beauty in life and improving the world for future generation­s. He struggled to name the thing he’s most proud of after receiving a lifetime achievemen­t award from a Flagstaff- based environmen­tal group.

“It’s hard for me to prioritize in that order,” he said. “It’s something I enjoyed doing all my life. People have passion, we’re born with that, plus a purpose in life.”

Zah said he could not have done the work alone and credited team efforts that always included his wife, Rosalind. Throughout his life, he never claimed to be an extraordin­ary Navajo, just a Navajo with extraordin­ary experience­s.

That resonated with students at Arizona State University where Zah served as the Native American liaison to the school’s president for 15 years, boosting the number of Native students and the number of Native graduates. Zah also pushed colleges and universiti­es to accept Navajo students — regardless of whether they graduated in the Arizona, New Mexico or Utah portion of the reservatio­n — at in- state tuition rates.

“It’s thousands upon thousands of Native students not only from Navajo who he encouraged to stay in school, seek advanced degrees and was available to counsel when they hit the rough spots,” said Eberhard, who worked for Zah while he was chairman. “He completely altered the way Arizona State University works with Native students.”

Nygren said he first interacted with Zah as a student at ASU, struck by Zah’s speech that he described as quiet and structured but powerful and vivid.

“To see him on the ASU campus brought a lot of inspiratio­n to myself,” he said. “I probably wouldn’t have gone into constructi­on management if he wasn’t so influentia­l at ASU.”

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Peterson Zah

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