Hi,
I'm sorry but it seems that Berto have got some wrong information.
I hope this message will be read carefully by all subscribers of this list, including those who made the controversial decision.
It seems unusual that such an orthography can be used enough to have this level of recognition (to the extent that it displaces the formal orthography) and yet not be recognised by the standard.
The only level of recognition this ortography had was a wiki. There *might* be a Linux locale in the future, but that's not a recognition.
I don't know anything about Linux locale, but this wiki is just one of thousands resources in this orthography. Yes, classical version doesn't have its own Language Institute due to political issues, but it is recognized; there are regular printed newspapers, recognized by government in this grammar; big number of books in this grammar are printed yearly (including fiction and scientific). Vast majority of sites and blogs are created in classical version (I don't have specific statistics, but rough count allows to say that around 80-90% of all Belarusian language sites and almost 100% of Belarusian language blogs are in classical version). It is not recognized by ISO yet just because nobody here in Belarus knew that it could be necessary; lack of ISO code never was an obstacle to use the language.
It is codified thoroughly; there are reference books, textbooks, primers in it; big orthographic dictionaries exist, and cross-language dictionaries as well.
A double standard would be usable if both version where recognized at international level, yet they are not and there is no apparent chance for such a recognition. If this claim was accepted we would have no way to keep anyone from asking (say) a Quaker wikipedia based on what's survived of that language in Melville's work, another in runic script, etc. This is absolutely NOT acceptable.
It is just speculation. There are no obstacles to classical version being recognized at international level. Some languages which are not codified, and are spoken just by hundreds of people are recognized; and this language is codified, has strict rules, and is actively used by approx. 50-100 thousand people.
I understand that people have worked for this and no one says their work will be deleted, what is in discussion is whether it should be hosted by wmf or not. If and when an Arbitration Committee chooses for a NO the existing content will obviously be handed over to the Community, so that they can host it where they please. This is not the Holy Inquisition, Gestapo or NKVD, we don't burn books in public squares.
Thanks, really. But the main point is that this content is free encyclopedic content, it is strongly crosslinked to other wmf projects (interwiki, commons pics, mediawiki software and so on), and it seems that there is no other competitive projects where this content could be usefully hosted and worked on.
Has the Norwegian solution been considered (seperate Bokmål and Nynorsk Wikipedias) as a soltution to the Belarussian problem?
If they get an ISO recognition they will obviously be hosted as anyone else, but not until then. We absolutely exclude becoming a place in which linguistic codes get issued, because this is not wmf mission.
Thanks for this point. I hope ISO code will be issued in nearby future and Norwegian solution will be possible.
Thank you.
--- Monk, native Belarusian speaker, who can use both grammar systems, and who is clearly against the discrimination of living natural language in Wikipedia.