
Nguyễn Thị Minh Khai
Vietnamese revolutionary leader and Indochinese Communist Party cadre
of 100 · stable trend · Some good traits but inconsistent
Standing
50/100
Raw Score
40/85
Confidence
65%
Evidence
Medium
About
Nguyễn Thị Minh Khai was a Vietnamese revolutionary organizer active from her teenage years until her execution by French colonial authorities in 1941.
The public record strongly supports resilience, integrity, and liberation-oriented social care toward colonized workers and women. The score is restrained because evidence for theistic belief or worship discipline is thin, and the record is mainly Marxist-Leninist and party-centered.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
High integrity, resilience, and liberation-oriented social care are visible and repeated; the overall score is limited by thin evidence for God-centered belief and worship discipline, plus the risks of revolutionary violence.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Public record is strongly ideological and moral but does not establish theistic belief.
Accountability language is political and historical rather than last-day religious accountability.
No reliable public evidence of belief in unseen spiritual order.
No reliable public evidence of scripture-guided life.
No public evidence of prophetic modeling as a life framework.
Contribution to Others
Letters and family actions show concern, though activism separated her from mother and child.
Women and youth organizing is documented; orphan-specific evidence is absent.
Worker, peasant, and colonized-population liberation were central commitments.
Underground networks aided comrades, but broad stranger/traveler help is thin.
Direct individual aid evidence is limited beyond comrades and family.
Her life’s work targeted colonial rule, class oppression, and women’s political constraint.
Personal Discipline
No reliable public evidence of regular worship or prayer.
No reliable public evidence of religiously obligated charity.
Reliability
She repeatedly upheld declared commitments and refused to betray comrades under torture and sentencing.
Stability Under Pressure
Exile sources describe poverty, precarious work, and continued organizing.
She continued under family separation, childbirth, husband’s arrest, and imprisonment.
Arrest, torture, death sentence, and execution showed extreme pressure endurance.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Entered youth and women-focused revolutionary organizing
As a teenager in Nghệ An/Vinh, Minh Khai joined nationalist-revolutionary circles and was assigned to mobilize women and young people.
→ Established an early pattern of disciplined organizing.
mediumRepresented the Indochinese Communist Party at the Seventh Comintern Congress
She studied at the University of the East and addressed the Comintern Congress, becoming a rare Vietnamese woman with high-level international revolutionary standing.
→ Expanded her leadership from local women’s organizing into international representation.
highLed Saigon-Chợ Lớn party work and women/worker mobilization
Vietnamese sources identify her as secretary of the Saigon-Chợ Lớn City Party Committee and a Southern Regional Party Committee member working with workers and women in clandestine conditions.
→ Her leadership moved into high-risk urban command responsibility.
highArrested, tortured, and refused to betray comrades
After arrest by French colonial authorities, Vietnamese official sources report severe torture and her refusal to reveal the organization or identify comrades.
→ A major integrity and resilience signal: her commitments held under extreme coercion.
very_highAssociation with a revolutionary movement that pursued uprising and sabotage
French records and later scholarship link her to documents and leadership around the Southern Uprising period. The anti-colonial goal is clear, but armed revolutionary strategy carried risks for civilians, soldiers, and political opponents.
→ Complicates social-care and integrity scoring.
mediumExecuted by French colonial authorities
Most accessible sources give August 28, 1941 for her execution by firing squad at Hóc Môn/Nga Ba Giồng with other Indochinese Communist Party leaders, though one museum source lists August 26.
→ Her death became a national martyrdom symbol and the final pressure test of her public commitments.
very_highEvidence Quality
3
Strong
5
Medium
1
Weak
Overall: medium
Historical public-record profile for admin review; scoring reflects observable evidence and source quality, not a judgment of the soul.