Black holes do not directly bend or interact with the Higgs field. The Higgs field is a fundamental field in particle physics that gives elementary particles their mass. It permeates all of space, and particles interact with this field to acquire mass.
Black holes, on the other hand, are regions of extremely dense matter or energy that result from the gravitational collapse of massive objects. Their gravitational fields are incredibly strong, and they bend the fabric of spacetime itself. This bending of spacetime is what causes the phenomenon we observe as gravity.
While black holes can warp spacetime, the Higgs field itself is not directly affected by their presence. The Higgs field exists independently of gravity and the curvature of spacetime caused by massive objects like black holes.