Question
How was the tragedy at Wounded Knee related to the Ghost Dance?
(1 point)
Responses
Wovoka, from the Paiute people, created the Ghost Dance to prepare the Lakota to fight at Wounded Knee.
Wovoka, from the Paiute people, created the Ghost Dance to prepare the Lakota to fight at Wounded Knee. - no response given
Sitting Bull led the Lakota at Wounded Knee, and he also spread the Ghost Dance.
Sitting Bull led the Lakota at Wounded Knee, and he also spread the Ghost Dance. - incorrect
After the killing of Lakota people by soldiers at Wounded Knee, Lakota created the Ghost Dance religion to express their sorrow.
After the killing of Lakota people by soldiers at Wounded Knee, Lakota created the Ghost Dance religion to express their sorrow. - no response given
Groups of Lakota left reservations after the banning of the Ghost Dance, and soldiers killed many of them at Wounded Knee.
(1 point)
Responses
Wovoka, from the Paiute people, created the Ghost Dance to prepare the Lakota to fight at Wounded Knee.
Wovoka, from the Paiute people, created the Ghost Dance to prepare the Lakota to fight at Wounded Knee. - no response given
Sitting Bull led the Lakota at Wounded Knee, and he also spread the Ghost Dance.
Sitting Bull led the Lakota at Wounded Knee, and he also spread the Ghost Dance. - incorrect
After the killing of Lakota people by soldiers at Wounded Knee, Lakota created the Ghost Dance religion to express their sorrow.
After the killing of Lakota people by soldiers at Wounded Knee, Lakota created the Ghost Dance religion to express their sorrow. - no response given
Groups of Lakota left reservations after the banning of the Ghost Dance, and soldiers killed many of them at Wounded Knee.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The correct response is: **Groups of Lakota left reservations after the banning of the Ghost Dance, and soldiers killed many of them at Wounded Knee.**
The tragedy at Wounded Knee in 1890 was closely related to the Ghost Dance movement, which was a spiritual response among Native Americans to their frustrations with U.S. policies. The U.S. government reacted to the spread of the Ghost Dance with fear and ultimately sought to suppress it, leading to increased tensions and the tragic confrontation at Wounded Knee.
The tragedy at Wounded Knee in 1890 was closely related to the Ghost Dance movement, which was a spiritual response among Native Americans to their frustrations with U.S. policies. The U.S. government reacted to the spread of the Ghost Dance with fear and ultimately sought to suppress it, leading to increased tensions and the tragic confrontation at Wounded Knee.