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Template talk:Crimean Tatar Surgun era




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Revert

[edit]

Hello PlanespotterA320, why are you reverting me? I am changing the link so it fits the actual name of the article. A pipe link is not needed here. Super Ψ Dro 20:23, 15 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]

About the Third Opinion request: The request made at Third Opinion has been removed (i.e. declined). Like all other moderated content dispute resolution venues at Wikipedia, Third Opinion requires thorough talk page discussion before seeking assistance. If an editor will not discuss, consider the recommendations which are made here. But I will give an opinion about this: The edit summary in this edit by PlanespotterA320 is about as plain a claim of prohibited page ownership as I've seen. And, yes, reverting without explanation, either by a edit comment or opening a discussion on the talk page is disruptive, especially when coupled with the refusal to discuss set out above. — TransporterMan (TALK) 18:43, 17 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]

If anyone is being disruptive, it's the one, who isn't even a Crimean subject matter specialist on the wiki, who decided to start all the drama by insisting changing the spelling in the first place, and THEN deciding to drag such a petty matter into a full blown discussion complete with a request for comment (Super Dromaeosaurus). I maintain that this should be let to those who have specialized in Crimea and детатаризация related matters on the wiki, and have no interest in dealing with such comments who only contribute sparking such conflicts to the wiki. I suggest they find something more productive to do (produce content) instead of making petty fusses over existing content they have no intention of meaningfully contributing to. Detatarization is the proper word here, as it is derived from the Russian word детатаризация, which is not hyphenated, and hypenation changes the meaning of the word. Please keep in mind that there is also an ongoing controversy around the hypenation of the term "Crimean Tatar" in Russian, which is often done by outsiders and opposed within the community. TLDR - anyone who isn't a Crimea subject-matter person should stay out of this and not start this drama in the first place. I have better things to be than put up with these tireless stupid nonstop pings from people who never contribute meaningfully or even read the Crimea content here who arrogantly think they know best.--PlanespotterA320 (talk) 22:14, 17 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
But as shown above, per English recommendations, "de-Tatarization" is preferred, and it's also more used in the academic world. The Russian word does not matter here. Other Wikipedia pages follow this convention, see Sub-Saharan Africa for example. See also Wikipedia:Hyphens and dashes, precisely 'They are used: [...] when prefixing a capitalized word, such as "un-Christian"'. Super Ψ Dro 22:29, 17 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Great, I've undone the edit. But I note that unilaterally reverting a move that was agreed upon by a RM [7] won't do you any favors. Super Ψ Dro 17:57, 22 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
It is not entirely illogical to have a link label that is not the article title. If you had an understanding of the template, you would know that the Key parts section is largely in chronological order. The toponym renaming was immediatly after the deportation, however, other manifestations of detatarization occured at different times. The toponym renaming is simply the most important and prominent aspect here (the 1920's book burning and occasional mislabeling of Amet-khan in the later 20th century being a relatively minor aspect of it). People looking for information on the subject will be better served by being able to easily find the link to the article that clearly covers the toponym renaming as opposed to the niche phrase of detatarization. (Heck some parts of detatarization weren't even part of the official Surgun era covered by the template as clearly labeled in the title which specifies that this template is only for 1944-1989 manifestations, which fits the toponym renaming but not nessesarily all other forms of detatarization). And pipe links are perfectly fine to help articles fit the navboxes better. If the Gromyko commission article used the full super long name of the commission, the navbox certainly still should use the simpler name. And the deportation article is labeled by a pipelink too. For the billionth time, please find something more productive to do than being blatantly obstructionist in the design of this navbox, stop wasting my time, please inform yourself well about Crimean history before pushing your opinion on this navbox. I have tried to reason with you, proposed this compromise, etc, all in vein for this is like trying to explain calculus to one who doesn't know their 12x12 table. In the time you have spent droning on and demanding use of the improper term I have already filled one of the remaining redlinks and I certainly hope you will drop the stick by the time I finish the remaining two. Please drop the stick, accept the comprimise, and move on to something more productive, or at least bother to slightly inform yourself about the subject of this navbox before making a single further reply.--PlanespotterA320 (talk) 15:11, 23 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
It makes no sense to have the link title only cover part of the article if the link is to the whole article. It confuses readers what the linked article is actually about. Someone wanting to read about propaganda in other forms would not expect to find this in an article about topographical renamiing. And while we could pipe to De-Tatarization of Crimea#Topography renaming, this would seem to make the link less useful since the whole article seems relevant to the template not just that subsection so we have the same problem that readers will be unaware, in fact they will be confused why they are being taken to a subsection when the whole article is relevant to what they want to read about. An alternative would be to include multiple links to different subsections, but it's unclear to me where these links would fit in the template, and even if a space could be found, it's unclear to me this would be better. It seems to me it's best just to have a single link to the whole article rather than multiple links to different subsections since ultimately the whole article is relevant. We often cannot expect to have perfect chronological order in templates since different issues are covered in different articles and some things may be short, other things may happen over a long span of time. In this case, I wonder if the De-Tatarization of Crimea should be moved around, perhaps to the beginning or end to reduce chronological confusion, but either way we should not confuse readers by failing to tell them what an article is about. Readers will be way more confused by a link which is about way more than the link title tells them about, then they will be the chronology being a bit messy. Nil Einne (talk) 04:33, 24 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
It is NOT the entire article that is relevant to the template, and you would know that if you were vaguely familiar with Crimean history or at least read the title of the navbox which CLEARLY indicates that the navbox is ONLY for 1944-1989 era. Detatarization in a much more broad sense has lasted over centuries, and hence pre-1944 and post-1989 manifestations (ex, 1920s book burning, Russian Empire era detatarization, etc) are outside of this template's scope (will eventually be addressed by a different navbox when I get to making one). We will not have a redundant link to the demonization/Tatarophobia section (since we already have a link to the article for that). For now we will have the pipe link to the ONE relevant non-redundant section. If/when I add content and a section to the article about detatarization of Crimea in the Russian Empire, it better not be given another pipe link in the template as I hope everyone here is aware that the Russian Empire fell BEFORE the Surgun era of 1944-1989 (but given statements of various editors here, I know better than to make assumptions of that kind).--PlanespotterA320 (talk) 14:25, 24 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
"A 1948 conference in Crimea was dedicated to promoting and sharing anti-Crimean-Tatar sentiments.[5]" Clearly that happened between 1944-1989. I expected most of the "Soviet party officials in Crimea indoctrinated the Slavic population of Crimea with Tatarophobia, depicting Crimean Tatars as "traitors", "bourgeoisie", or "counter-revolutionaries", and falsely implying that they were "Mongols" with no historical connection to the Crimean peninsula (despite their Greek, Italian, Armenian, and Gothic roots.)" happened during 1944-1989 too. Considering all the other things they did, it would seem very unusual they completely stopped their indoctrination efforts from 1944, except for that one conference. In other words, the entire propaganda section is of relevance. Also while the airport name is new, it's unclear to me that attempts to pretend Amet-khan Sultan was Dagestani only happened after 1989. This seems unlikely since from the article on Amet-khan Sultan, he was pressured to say he was Dagestani even though he wasn't during his life. Since he died in 1971, it seems very weird that there would be attempts to make him Dagestani before he died, then this stopped between 1971 to 1989. In any case, even if the Soviets really stopped trying to make Amet-khan Sultan Dagestani after he died, the attempts to make him Dagestani during his life probably should be mentioned in the De-Tatarization of Crimea article since this seems to be a somewhat iconic example where a Crimean Tatar hero (from the period of the template!) has been falsely made into a Dagestani both during his life and after. BTW, there's no mention of 1920 book burning in the article itself, only in the lead. This is a problem which needs to be fixed since the lead is supposed to summarise the body. I didn't really consider the lead when making my comments above since the lead shouldn't be that important. Nil Einne (talk) 16:04, 24 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
PlanespotterA320, what if you included a note specifying that Crimean Tatars are different from the Volga Tatars? Don't think "detatarization" would make this confusion any clearer or that it would fix all issues. I can bet any reader new to the topic (that is, most people) would first assume that Crimean Tatars are related to Tatarstan Tatars regardless of whether the article is titled in one way or another. I really hope you don't reply to this with something along the lines of "they would know if they had the slightest idea of Crimea Tatars" blah blah. This is not how Wikipedia works. It isn't a specialist-only website or something. Super Ψ Dro 18:34, 24 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
This article contains a link to the article about Crimean Tatars, which clarifies that. We should not need to have a paragraph dedicated to the origin of the word "tatar", history of the term, Crimean Tatar ethnogenesis, etc, in every single article at every mention of the ethnonym. The wikilink is sufficient.--PlanespotterA320 (talk) 18:54, 24 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template_talk:Crimean_Tatar_Surgun_era&oldid=1229485224"

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This page was last edited on 17 June 2024, at 02:24 (UTC).

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