Miss Navajo

This article is about the pageant. For the 2007 documentary film, see Miss Navajo (film).
Former Miss Navajo Crystalyne Curley speaking to a crowd after her coronation in 2012.

Miss Navajo Nation is a pageant that has been held annually on the Navajo Nation, United States, since 1952.

The first Miss Navajo was Dr. Beulah Melvin Allen, in 1952. She was crowned at the Navajo Nation Fair, the largest fair held on the Navajo Nation, which had been established three years earlier.

Pageant contestants must be unmarried, over 18 years of age, be a high school graduate, and be able to speak the Navajo language. They compete in such activities as answering questions about traditional and modern Navajo customs both in Navajo and English, sheep butchering, and performing a contemporary and Navajo cultural talent.

The current Miss Navajo Nation is Ronda Joe of Rock Point, Arizona.[1]

Film

A documentary film called Miss Navajo, directed by Billy Luther (who is Navajo, Hopi, and Laguna), was filmed in 2005 and 2006, released in 2006, and shown on the Independent Lens documentary series on PBS in 2007. Miss Navajo is a sacred tradition that still continues today. Miss Navajo's duties as a leader are to guide and be a role model of the Navajo Nation.

External links

References

  1. Times, Navajo (Sep 11, 2016). "70th Miss Navajo Nation is Ronda Joe". Navajo Times. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
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