In a scene from the 2022 documentary “Navalny,” Russian dissident Alexie Navalny’s oldest daughter, Dasha, recalls that when she was 13, she began thinking about her father dying. As she speaks, she apologizes for getting teary. She was 19 at the time of the on-camera interview and had been living far too long with the sense that her father’s anti-corruption work made him a target of Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin. Amid international responses to news of Navalny’s death on Feb.16 at an Arctic penal colony, it’s easy to forget that in addition to international expressions of outrage and despair, there is an intimate group of people for whom the grief is deeply palpable.