Families of COVID-19 victims share their grief as Manitoba reaches 1,000 deaths
Manitoba has the second-highest per capita COVID-19 death rate among provinces

Rhonda Ross says her late husband Garry was a teacher not only by profession, but in life as well.
"He taught us about life, taught us about love, about opportunities. Everything is an opportunity. There's gifts around us all over the place," she said.
The couple shared many experiences over more than 30 years of marriage, including at the end. They were both diagnosed with COVID-19 during Manitoba's deadly second wave of cases.
While Rhonda would recover, Garry became one of the 1,000 Manitobans who have, to date, died as a result of the illness. He died on Dec. 2, 2020, at the age of 54.
"As hard as it was for the two of us to be sick together in his last days, I'm so grateful," she said.
"I'm so grateful that it was just the two of us, that we got to spend a lot of time together, and the talks and the things we shared in his last days — I'll keep those for my life."
WATCH | Families of COVID-19 victims share their grief:
With the announcement of three more COVID-19 deaths on Wednesday — a woman in her 50s, and men in their 60s and 70s — the province reached that bleak threshold of 1,000 fatalities from the illness.
Each one has left a hole in the lives of friends and family who carry the memories of the person they lost.
Ross says her husband was a proud Cree man, and the couple raised their three daughters in their home in Opaskwayak Cree Nation. She remembers him as "genuine, generous and kind, and most definitely humble."

"Sometimes he'd buy students shoes, or jackets in the winter," she said.
"He knew what it was like to not have a proper winter jacket as a child, or to go to school hungry. And he didn't like seeing, especially children, going through that. So he gave a lot and that became part of our household budget."
The family has started three bursaries in his name, which will go to students who have overcome hardship, like he did, and met their own goals.
'A slap in the face'
Manitoba's first death from the illness caused by the novel coronavirus was reported on March 26, 2020. The province didn't record its 100th death until Nov. 4, nearly eight months later.
In a little more than six months since then, 900 more people in the province have lost their lives to COVID-19.
Among the most recent was Dennis Langrell, who died on April 28 at the age of 66.
His brother, Doug Langrell, says Dennis was feeling congested when they last spoke, but dismissed the symptoms as a bad cold. Dennis resisted his sibling's urging to get tested for COVID-19, saying he had an appointment to get a vaccine. He wouldn't live long enough to get it.
"We didn't expect him to go quite as suddenly as he did,"