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Damon Douglas (Johnson) Ziemin

Portland, Oregon
July 2, 1972 - August 17, 2010
damonBelov

Beloved husband, father, and son, Damon Douglas (Johnson) Ziemin died August 17, 2010, in a tragic electrical accident while visiting the home of relatives outside Moscow in Russia. A resident of Portland, Oregon, he was 38.
            Funeral services are to include a Mass at 10 a.m., Friday, September 3, at Immaculate Conception Catholic Church in Polson, Montana, followed by a reception and a multi-day remembrance on family lands on the Flathead Indian Reservation.
            A first descendant of the Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Nation, Damon was born at the old Anchorage Native Hospital, in Alaska, on July 2, 1972. He grew up in Polson and Anchorage, where he graduated from Bartlett High School and the University of Alaska Anchorage with a double Russian/Premed major and a minor in Spanish. Damon followed his paternal roots to Russia, where he spent a year in a University of Alaska exchange program in Magadan, Siberia. There met his wife to be, Lyuda (Terskikh) Ziemin.
            In 2009, Damon became a doctor of naturopathic medicine with licensures in Chinese medicine and acupuncture, received from the National College of Natural Medicine in Portland, where he was preparing a private practice.
            His family and friends knew Damon as a Renaissance man: scientist, gardener, wild lands firefighter, chef, world traveler, linguist, musician, Trekkie and Star Wars fanatic, trickster, yard sale enthusiast, and peacemaker. Damon’s enthusiasm for life and gregarious nature were legend. Friend to many, he brought unlikely groups of people together with music and laughter around many campfires.
            Damon leaves behind his wife, Lyuda, and children, Maxeem, 6, and Aneeka, 2. He’s survived by his mother, Kay Dubay Johnson of Polson; his father and stepmother, Gene and Inger Johnson of Polson; and his mother-in-law, Svyetlana Terskikh of Moscow. He leaves his older brothers Marc Johnson of Kenai, Alaska, and Tim Johnson of Polson; his brother-in-law Andre Terskikh of Moscow; stepsisters Julie Tolson of Polson and Karen Tolson of Denmark; his mother’s twin sister, Carol Dubay of Anchorage; and her children, Nikos Pastos, Melina Pastos, Chris and Andrea Okland, Nicolette Pastos and Zara Pastos, all of Anchorage; aunt Rene Dubay; uncle Kendall Forman of Polson and his children Jenaya, Maurita, Michaela, Sheri and Sheryl; Chester Johnson of Missoula; and  Lillian Stephenson, Helen McClellan and Ron McClellan, Larry Myers, Janice Myers all of Polson, and Gloria and Ed Violette of Boulder, Colorado.
            Preceding him in death were his paternal grandparents, Marie Zimin Johnson and Carl Johnson of Polson; maternal grandparents Abraham Joseph Dubay and Marion Vessey Dubay Pariseau, stepgrandfather Patrick Antoine Pariseau, aunt Elaine Dubay Forman, and first cousins Kevin and Ferin Forman all of Polson; and father-in-law Anatoli (Tolya) Terskikh of Moscow.
            He was often found in the Mission Mountains of Montana, where his ashes will be spread. His father said, “Damon’s spirit will live on with all of us…in many parts of the world. This morning through an open window we heard the sound of wind in the trees. I immediately thought of when Damon and I were camping in the mountains, sleeping outside, and hearing that same sound of wind in the treetops. When I hear the wind in the future…I will think of Damon and his smiling face.”


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  1. Jennifer Howell Gallant says:

    I am so sorry to learn of Damon’s death. I did not know him as an adult but I have very fond memories of him. He and I were in the sam group that traveled to Leningrad from Anchorage when we were in high school. I was the youngest in the group and he always made a point of cracking a joke, asking if I needed help with homework etc. What I will remember about him is that he always talked about his dreams of traveling and seeing the world and to know that he actually lived his dream makes me smile. That is not a something that you find in many people.

    My thoughts are with your family. -Jennifer

  2. Joan LaTray Bell says:

    I knew Damon when i was married to a friend of his Donald. He was always interesting to visit. I would ask him about his worldly travels. He was kind and i will remeber him as a musician and world traveler. What a great loss, my regards to his family.

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