Dear colleagues:
I must admit that I have been quite surprised as to how unanimous the committee's
opinion has been toward rejecting Montenegrin. At this point, though, with the ISO 639-3
code now fully approved, I think you are in error in failing to acknowledge Montenegrin as
"eligible". I may not have a vote here, but I am going to push back on this
question.
The committee is basing its position on item #3 of the "Requisites for
eligibility": "The language must be sufficiently unique that it could not
coexist on a more general wiki. In most cases, this excludes regional dialects and
different written forms of the same language." The explanation goes on to give the
reason: "The degree of difference required is considered on a case-by-case basis. The
committee does not consider political differences, since the Wikimedia Foundation's
goal is to give every single person free, unbiased access to the sum of all human
knowledge, rather than information from the viewpoint of individual political
communities."
It seems to me that there are two reasons for this rule. One is to focus contributor
efforts so as to encourage the creation of meaningful projects without a dilution of
effort into lots of small, incomplete, less useful, possibly conflicting projects. The
second is to try to keep all meaningful projects operating on a politically neutral basis.
But I've got news for you: on both grounds, the horse is already out of the barn.
In terms of effort, we already have four wikis running in this language: shwiki, srwiki,
hrwiki, bswiki. The effort is already diluted, if you will. But one more is not going to
change the dilution factor much—especially given that many of the people who want to
contribute to the Montenegrin project are not interested in touching the other projects
anyway.
The reason for that is the second point: politics. The current projects already exist, and
are already based in "individual political communities", whether you like that
or not. So by rejecting Montenegrin, you are forcing people into projects that already
operate under the viewpoint of "individual political communities", and
(sometimes) hostile ones at that. There is plenty of evidence offered at
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Requests_for_new_languages/Wikipedia_Monten… that
the other wikis have not been fully open to Montenegrin political points of view. And even
linguistically there is a tilt against Montenegrin. Serbian Wikipedia, for example, is
only about 5% Ijekavian, about 90% Ekavian, and the rest a hodgepodge. I don't know if
the hostility to a more inclusive community was more in the past, or if it is more in the
present, or both. But at this point there is a history that many of the Montenegrin
language advocates are not willing to touch.
"The committee does not consider political differences[.]" Good luck. It's
political whichever way it goes. The only real way for the committee to stay apolitical is
to follow ISO 639-3 down the line, at least where languages are "individual" and
"living". I don't necessarily think LangCom must do that, but understand
that all such deviations from ISO 639-3 are political to some extent. Until now, LangCom
could deny Montenegrin by falling back on the SIL/Ethnologue position that Montenegrin was
"another name for Serbo-Croatian". Still, starting now, it's a more
political act to reject Montenegrin than to accept it. Maybe the Montenegrin
community's "win" at the ISO 639 committee was more political than
linguistic. Still, that's the ISO committee's problem, not ours. At this point,
the formal world standard for languages recognizes Montenegrin as a separate language
within the macrolanguage hbs/sh, and we should, too.
Finally, going back to effort: The test wiki, which I opened on December 12 (after the ISO
-2 code was published, on the assumption that the ISO -3 code would be automatic), has
over 40 contributors and over 350 main space pages. It's the most active test in
Incubator right now. We've got a group of people excited about this project and
working hard to make it a reality. Why would we want to discourage that?
I think this committee well understands that only 20–50 or so of the existing Wikipedias
really serve the core purpose of being encyclopedic resources widely available to a broad
community of users. There are others "in between", but most of the rest are
small projects that mostly serve local language/culture communities. This project will be
no worse that that, and better than many in that regard.
I wouldn't feel this way if there were still a single "Serbo-Croatian
Wikipedia". But there's not. So at this point, it's time to move on, and to
allow the Montenegrin language community to build its project.
Steven
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