51ĀŅĀ×

lithograph of Hopeton earthworks
Ohio's First Humanists

Advocate for Native American Rights

Zitkala-Sa (1876-1938), whose name meant Red Bird in her native language, was a Yankton Dakota Sioux born on the Yankton Reservation in South Dakota.

Convinced by missionaries to leave the reservation when she was 8 years old, Zitkala-Sa attended Whiteā€™s Indiana Manual Labor Institute, an assimilationist boarding school run by the Society of Friends (Quakers) in Wabash, Indiana.

Here, teachers forced her to speak English, practice Christianity, and dress like a white girl. Most traumatically, they cut off her long braids, an episode she recounted in a 1900 Atlantic Monthly story titled ā€œThe School Days of an Indian Girl.ā€ Coming from a culture in which only captured enemies or persons in mourning wore short hair, Zitkala-Sa remembered that with this forced haircut, ā€œI lost my spirit.ā€

Zitkala-Å a. Collections of the Smithsonian Institution
Zitkala-Å a. Collections of the Smithsonian Institution

She later attended another Quaker institution, Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana, near the Ohio border. As an adult, she was a well-known writer, musician, and political activist, often working under her English married name, Gertrude Simmons Bonnin.

She was an advocate for both womenā€™s rights and Native American rights and was secretary of the first national Indian rights organization, the Society of American Indians, founded in Columbus, Ohio, in 1911.

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Old Indian Legends by Zitkala Sa

Old Indian Legends is a collection of Sioux short stories, but while her name is on the book, Zitkala-Sa considered herself a re-teller, not the author, of stories that are an important part of American culture.

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