
Gertrude Simmons Bonnin (Zitkála-Šá)
Yankton Dakota writer, musician, educator, and Native American rights activist
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
71/100
Raw Score
61/85
Confidence
82%
Evidence
High
About
Yankton Dakota writer, musician, educator, and organizer centered on Native cultural preservation, citizenship, voting rights, and resistance to assimilationist policy.
Strongest evidence is social care, resilience, and public integrity; belief and worship evidence is culturally significant but less directly documented in the framework terms.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Strong social-care, resilience, and public-integrity record; belief and worship scores remain cautious because evidence is culturally significant but not directly mapped to explicit devotional practice.
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
Spiritual-cultural seriousness is visible; explicit theistic creed is not clear in available sources.
Moral accountability is visible; afterlife doctrine is not directly documented.
Preservation of sacred Native cultural practices supports a strong spiritual-order signal.
Evidence supports inherited moral and cultural guidance, with limited scripture-specific mapping.
No strong prophetic-model evidence found; scored cautiously.
Contribution to Others
NPS notes time caring for her mother; family-care evidence is limited.
Critique of boarding-school harm supports a strong signal for Native children.
Policy work addressed health care, legal recognition, land rights, and exploitation.
Direct traveler evidence limited; advocacy covered legally marginalized Native people.
Organizing and public speaking suggest responsiveness to community needs.
Citizenship, voting-rights, anti-exploitation, and anti-assimilation work targeted legal and social constraints.
Personal Discipline
Sources discuss forced Quaker prayer and Native sacred culture, but not routine personal prayer practice.
Public service was substantial; religiously obligatory giving is not directly documented.
Reliability
Sustained public commitments despite institutional costs.
Stability Under Pressure
Left Earlham partly for financial and health reasons yet continued education, music, and advocacy.
Turned residential-school trauma and cultural dislocation into lifelong public work.
Persisted through firing, BIA pressure, and national political conflict.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Removed to White's Indiana Manual Labor Institute
Taken as a child to a residential school and later wrote about both education and forced cultural loss.
→ Became a core pressure point in later writing and advocacy.
highPublished criticism of boarding schools and was fired
Nationally published work challenged racist stereotypes and boarding-school harm; NPS reports it led to firing.
→ Accepted career cost to tell a public truth.
highCo-wrote The Sun Dance Opera
Completed a work based on a sacred Sioux ritual under federal restriction.
→ Created a landmark cultural work described as the first American Indian opera.
mediumPublished American Indian Stories
Combined autobiographical writing and Native stories, strengthening her role as author and advocate.
→ Preserved cultural memory and challenged stereotypes.
highExposed exploitation in Oklahoma's Poor Rich Indians report
Published a report on graft and exploitation against Native people in oil-rich lands.
→ Helped prompt government investigation.
very highFounded National Council of American Indians
Founded the National Council of American Indians with Raymond Bonnin and served as president, fundraiser, and speaker.
→ Created a durable organizing platform.
very highEvidence Quality
5
Strong
2
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: high
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and documented commitments, not hidden intention or salvation.