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== |
== Mile Budak quote == | ||
Ok, this is a secondary source, but an article in ''The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science'' cites page 605 of the 1986 version as saying: | |||
I already said - I am ready to discuss the editorial issues particular to this review only with people who read this book. The possession of subject knowledge is the supreme rule above all rules known in Misplaced Pages. | |||
:Mile Budak, a minister and a deputy head of state in the Pavelic's Ustasha government in Croatia, is on record as stating at a rally in Gospic on 22 July 1941, "One part of the Serbs we shall kill, another part we shall resettle in other places, and the remaining part we shall convert to the Catholic faith and thereby melt into Croats." | |||
Would anyone object if I threw that into the article (citing the article citing the page)? Someone who has the actual book should be able to find it and correct me. However, this will really throw all the J.A.'s ibids into a mess since (I'm guessing) he is using the 1948 version and I don't want to introduce confusion. -- ] (]) 06:17, 3 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
*Well, J. A. Comment follows this book review based on its 1948 edition. The 1986 edition has two authors - V. Novak and J. Blazevic. So, if it makes sense taking quotes from this edition - it must be clear which work it is - Blazevic's or Novak's. Also, if a latter edition shall be mentioned - then it makes sense to do it only if pointing at differences between the first and the latter.--] (]) 01:21, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
:: I'm only concerned about people being able to find sources if they are paginated differently. Otherwise, contentwise, where should this go? The whole content section is a mess of history, theories about church doctrine, and just random asides. Again, I took J.A.'s work and split it into subheadings so that the difference between the complete history and the random asides are clear. Again, reverted, so what now? My biggest problem was that there were never any dates or any real details in the article (just vague references to time). If the book really is a great scholarly work, it should have that level of detail. I guess it should go after "the Ustache terrorism" (oh that word should go too) sentence. That sentence though is extremely conclusionary. -- ] (]) 01:45, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
So, I am restoring my version due to several serious damages caused by the editor who apparently did not read this book: | |||
==Slobodan Kljakic== | |||
- There is 21 {{fact}}s requested and scattered frivolously which - if met - would require more quoted text than the whole article has now. Meanings of some sentences are distorted and that way requested {{fact}}s make no sense at all. Some of my sentences are summaries of the text across many pages and fully meeting a requested {{fact}} would force me to quote whole paragraphs or pages. | |||
Can somebody please explain me how is possible that Slobodan Kljakic statement about book:"A major piece, written by the academician Viktor Novak..." is in article. Misplaced Pages reliable sources rule is clearly saying different thing. Serbian ministry of information during Serbo-Croatian war is reputable source like Nazi Germany ministry of information during Holocaust, Iraq ministry of information during Iraq-Iran war, ...... | |||
- ''Plot summary'' is another nonsense here. This is a scholar work, not a thriller, a movie, or a science fiction book. | |||
I am not having anything against this statement, but we must add more information about publication publisher and war situation or it is against wikipedia reliable sources rule and it must be deleted--] (]) 09:14, 15 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
- ''A change in doctrine'' is yet another nonsense. What doctrine and whose doctrine? This question cannot be answered by a person who never saw this book. There was no doctrine at all - there were two mutually exclusive understanding of the role of faith in a society. For Strossmayer - serving people equals serving God, Papal infallibility is nonsense - for Roman Curia - God is in Rome incarnated in Roman Pope and the Pope is infallible. | |||
: I don't know. However, we could mention that the Vatican listed it on the Index librorum prohibitorum, citing him. That's at least not controversial at all. -- ] (]) 09:36, 7 December 2008 (UTC) | |||
- ''Portaryal of ... Stepinac'' does not matter chapters XV-XVIII - there is a lot more text in the previous chapters talking about Stepinac's work before WWII. When I added this paragraph - I did not mean that it is my final version of that paragraph. | |||
:: Hmm, now an odd problem. I can't see to find the book's listing on any of the lists (or databases) located at ]. That's really strange. Maybe there's something more to your questions about its reliability, Rjecina. -- ] (]) 09:45, 7 December 2008 (UTC) | |||
- 'introducing the Old Slavonic language as the language of the Roman Catholic Church in the Balkans' - is a primitive distortion of my original text and the reference number at the end of this text does not support this changed text at all. | |||
:::I agree Ricky, I can't find much about this either. Except that the claim seems perhaps to have been first made not by Kljakić but by Novak himself in the 1960 edition. "Vatikana, a Santo Officio stavio djelo na Index librorum prohibitorum" ("The Vatican and Santo officio put the work on the Index librorum prohibitorum"). See - although it is not clear exactly which work Novak is referring to. His own or another? Now, without any external verification, (I can see merely *possible* verification ), such a claim by the author himself, and repeated by Kljakić, would certainly need to be treated with a certain amount of caution. ] (]) 10:29, 7 December 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::This is Index Librorum Prohibitorum from blogspot and nothing. Letter , letter | |||
::::In my thinking that statement has been true, but book publisher is not reliable. My mistake--] (]) 12:08, 7 December 2008 (UTC) | |||
It's been long enough. I removed the section . -- ] (]) 04:50, 15 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
- parts of my text were removed without any rational explanation; that way the last section of my review is seriously damaged | |||
:If this book wasn't on the list should it be removed from the list of banned books article (mirrored elsewhere...)? ] (]) 04:57, 4 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
All above 'discussion' is noting else than irrational arguing of those who never read the book - against everything they do not like (for some reason)in the text. | |||
:: Is this particular article you have in mind? There's linked here, and it's not at ]. -- ] (]) 07:10, 4 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
So, kindly please stay away from this article in order to respect a) those who have valid knowledge of the book content and who spent time to read the book and who might be ready to continue writing the review b) readers who deserve a professionally written review. | |||
::: Nor at ]. -- ] (]) 07:11, 4 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
However, I'll accept any sincere and knowledgeable improvement of my text. Going to continue my work on this article soon. | |||
::::Oh, okay. In researching the article a bit I came across a bunch of mirror sites (http://www.google.com/search?q=Magnum+Crimen+Index+Librorum+Prohibitorum&rls=com.microsoft:en-us&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&startIndex=&startPage=1]) based on the Misplaced Pages article, but perhaps they are not updated and that bit was already removed from the relevant articles. Thanks for checking it out. ] (]) 07:16, 4 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
== To counter assault on this article and its authors == | |||
--] (]) 21:59, 16 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
:Welcome to Misplaced Pages. The encyclopedia '''anyone''' can edit. You don't get to pick and choose who edits this page. Perhaps you should read ]. And if you'd rather follow your own personal rules over Misplaced Pages's, then you can start your own encyclopedia. ]]] 22:03, 16 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
*No - encyclopedia is all about knowledge. It has nothing to do with ownership. Can be edited by anyone who posess proper knowledge of the edited subject. --] (]) 22:10, 16 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
I started writing the Russian version of this article based on the latest uncensored version of this article. My plan is to find people who could help me in writing French, Italian, and Spanish versions.--] (]) 13:37, 11 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: No, anyone can edit the article. That is the entire argument behind ] which is a core principle. The article should not require that someone has read the entire book to your satisfaction to be allowed to edit. If there are accurate, factual claims, based on reliable sources, then it goes into the article. To act like you and only you can decide who can and cannot edit is an attitude that will not be accepted. I mean, why are you just removing the fact tags without any explanation? There are plenty of statements that need to be sourced, including some that are disputed. -- ] (]) 08:43, 17 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Note about Vatican's ban == | |||
::: Look, I can understand if you think I'm destroying the point of what you are arguing but do you really think , (including wikifying Harris' name, moving the footnotes to the end, removing a dead link) is appropriate? I mean, if you really want to improve this article, actually work with other people, see what they did, and make changes, not just blindly revert and ask why no one helps. -- ] (]) 08:47, 17 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
In the Serbian daily newspaper, Politika (February 21. 2006) there is an article ('Dva izostavljena poglavlja iz knjige Viktora Novaka' by Slobodan Kljakic) which one of its paragraphs states | |||
::::J. A. Comment, no-one is asking you to quote whole blocks of text. But wherever you refer to material in the book, including any explanations etc by the author, you must say from where in the book (ie which page numbers, in which edition) you are getting that stuff. As I said in an earlier section on this page, you are not being asked to write a review, and if you try to write one your efforts will be reverted. Articles should really be concerned with '''recorded''' facts, and should cite '''where''' those facts are recorded. To repeat, it is NOT necessary to have read the book to edit the article constructively, any more than one needs to have known Pavelić to write about him.] (]) 19:02, 17 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
''Vatikan je Novakovu knjigu, ubrzo posto je objavljena, uvrstio u "moralnu kugu", stavljajuci je na Index Librorum prohibitorum. Kako je pisalo u zagrebackom "Narodnom listu" u jesen 1948 godine, "Vatikan je i ovdje postupio po starom receptu: Sant' Officio je rekao 'Spali!'" ''' | |||
:::::And J. A. Comment, now please go and restore all the tags you removed. If the article is going to claim that Novak was a catholic priest, we need a source for that. (I am not convinced that he ever was, though he seems to have studied for the priesthood.) Likewise we need to know the authority for claiming he was a historian at Belgrade university. (I happen know that he was, but that is not good enougoh for Misplaced Pages.) These claims were not put in by you, and even if they were, it is not for you to decide that they don't need sources. And those two points are just the start. Why do the tags distress you anyway? They are used in the hope that editors will be prompted to help fill in the gaps. Put them back or I will. (Oh, and it's sufficient to use his "Dr" title once. For the rest it is enough to say "Novak" or "Viktor Novak.") ] (]) 19:21, 17 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
*To Ricky - you did not read book, which was quite obvious to me just after reading a few chapters of this book. 'If there are accurate, factual claims, based on reliable sources, then it goes into the article. To act like you and only you can decide who can and cannot edit is an attitude that will not be accepted.I mean, why are you just removing the fact tags without any explanation?' - I see full explanation given by J. A. Comment showing clearly that you do not have a slightest idea what this book is all about. So, where are yours 'accurate, factual claims, based on reliable sources'??? I did not see a single one here.--] (]) 13:38, 27 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
In short, the Politika states in their article that Vatican marked this book as a 'moral plague' putting it on the Index Librorum prohibitorum. The article quotes the Zagreb newspaper "Narodni list" (autumn 1948): "Vatican here acted according to the old recipe" Saint' Officio said 'Burn it'". | |||
:: See the ] policy. I think it's been in place for like three years now. I'm not just pulling things out of thin air. The purpose is not have an article full of editors' interpretation of what the book is about, what's important, what's controversial (called ] and against policy) but a short summary of the book along with '''why''' it is important including what specifically is controversial about it, all by other people (in other words, what does '''the world''' think about the book, not what do the editors who managed to find this page think). The repeated "you haven't read it so don't comment on it" responses are missing the entire point: this is supposed to be an encyclopedia article about a book, not a book report. Look at my edit history. I rarely have a clue about the actual subject matter I'm working on. That's supposed to be the entire point. I can find some background information and add it in if it's relevant. Instead, we have an article that's been dead for two weeks because no one gets to add in the exact text they want. Too bad, because I'd rather spend time discussing how the article should be organized not what specific facts from which chapter get to be included and who has read the book the way some people here like to be enough of an authority to edit the article. Last, J.A. went in and including the fact tags. Ask him about it. I would rather we get neutral sources but others want to play the "I am the only one allowed to edit the article" (see ] for why ''that'' is against policy) routine. -- ] (]) 10:17, 2 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
So, evidence is given here that this book was on the Index Librorum prohibitorum as of autumn 1948.--] (]) 16:16, 11 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
Also, I'll just add that I love how J.A.'s search for knowledge and truth ended the exact moment he was no longer able to control the article himself. There's still the talk page if anyone actually wants to have any discussion. There's at least three sections above that actually can be talked about. I would be open to that if anyone else is actually interested. Put a note on my talk page because I don't make it a habit to work on articles where I'm clearly not wanted. Also, as an admin, I could remove the protection this instant, but I have the feeling that nobody is actually interested in revising other people's work towards neutrality and actual discussion, instead people want to play the "my version so screw everything everyone else did in between" bit. I mean, seriously, I moved a bunch of citations and formatted them, but they have to be reverted? People should be more mature than that. -- ] (]) 10:17, 2 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Yup, that's evidence... unless someone has a better source contradicting this? --<span style="font-family:Eras Bold ITC;">] <sup>(])</sup></span> 16:17, 11 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
*I'm afraid that you are defending your 'rights' to change someone's work without any relevant knowledge of the subject. (You are calling upon Misplaced Pages's rules pointlessly here.) J. A. Comment complained that you distorted the facts about this book. I verified it to the some extent and saw that (s)he is right. Just an example: V. Novak wrote about Strossmayer's attempt to introduce the Old Slavonic Church language into the Roman Catholic Church '''liturgy''' in Kingdom of Yugoslavia - but you stated it this way 'introducing the Old Slavonic language as the language of the Roman Catholic Church '. Moreover, you added some cynism ('he was no longer able to control the article himself' - yes it is difficult to defend good work under free and unrestrained attacks coming from you, Rjecina, and others) defending your changes; it is too apparent that only J. A. Comment read this book which all of you did not do it. I regret that J. A. Comment avoids any communication with me for some reason (probably as a consequence of the Rjecina's harassment). I've read only first three chapters of this book and just browsed the rest of the book - but I am not going to overtake J. A. Comment's edits. Maybe, just support his/her work when I find it appropriate and timely.--] (]) 01:46, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
:Is the article available online? ] (]) 22:46, 11 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
*Can you read Serbian?--] (]) 23:34, 11 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: Per above, isn't the fact that none of the versions of the Index at ] include the book more persuasive? Just because it's a reliable source doesn't mean it's right. I think it's more likely a single author in a Serbian newspaper got it wrong over every single listing of the Index is wrong. -- ] (]) 00:11, 12 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
::: Hm come to think of it, the article quote above does not explicitly state the book was added to the ''Index Librorum prohibitorum''... --<span style="font-family:Eras Bold ITC;">] <sup>(])</sup></span> 00:33, 12 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
*Nonsense. Calling upon Misplaced Pages as a source? All universities, colleges and even high schools in America excluded Misplaced Pages as a reference for anything. Index Librorum prohibitorum was open by Vatican, but never went public i.e. there is no digitzed copies of any of the Index' lists.--] (]) 00:42, 12 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: I'm talking about the links provided ]. I don't see it , or . -- ] (]) 02:30, 12 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
*The first 'here' is a Misplaced Pages garbage article. The second 'here' lists books up to 1559 (we are talking about 1948). The third 'here' is a garbage that lists some entries from 1990 and after, if selecting 'Serbian' as the language - which shows nothing in common with the index. The fourth 'here' gives an incomplete list of the Index until 1944, even though claiming up 1948 (we are talking about 1948). If typing the author's name in the third 'here', say Malaparte, I've expected to get the correct information: ''- La pelle, storia e racconto - Decr. S. Off. 31-05-1950'' i.e. Malaparte's book La Pelle (The Skin) being put on the Index as of May 31, 1950 by the Decree of the Congregation of the Holy Office of the Inquisition. I did not get anything! This poor soul ] continues throwing nonsense after nonsense. Does he still think that he deserves any attention here?--] (]) 23:15, 12 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: Did you mean ? A source which I repeat again doesn't show Novak's work? If you could knock off the personal attacks, I'd be happy to discuss things reasonably with you. -- ] (]) 03:57, 13 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
*You mentioned personal attacks, eh? All time you are calling upon references which have nothing in common with the subject. Can't you accept that the Bacon for Freedom of Expression does not have anything in common with the Index? If you ever saw the Index, then, as I mentioned it above, the Index will show the author name (say - Sartre, Jean-Paul), the scope of the prohibition (Opera omnia, i.e. all the works he wrote up to ... October 27, 1948) and the decree timestamp (-Decr. S. Off. 27-10-1948, i.e. Decree of the Congregation of the Holy Office of the Inquisition as of October 27, 1948). The Bacon has no single entry I've found in the Index. Please, be so kind, do not waste my time by harassing common sense and not showing any relevant knowledge of this subject.--] (]) 01:24, 14 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: Again, I got Beacon for Freedom from the listing ]. If you want to continue to be insulting, feel free but, I will continue to question you about something that seems off. As noted ], all we have is a single Serbian newspaper article that mentions this (and it's questionable itself). The incivility though is tiresome, even as you do change IP addresses and names constantly. -- ] (]) 09:00, 14 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
::: Also, it's noted ] that Sartre was on the list. -- ] (]) 09:03, 14 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Please, pay attention to the facts: <br>Slobodan Kljakic is a university professor who published a book that passes the scrutiny of an editorial board<br>We have below information coming from Prof. Novak - his book was on the Index<br>The Index condemnation was echoed in Narodni list (newspaper).--] (]) 13:06, 16 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
== More information about the Vatican ban == | |||
:: Look, I'll be blunt. If you want to make an encyclopedia where only people you have deemed "well-versed enough" can edit the article, go ahead. This is not that. This is an encyclopedia '''anyone''' can edit and that's the issue. When J.A. reverts every single thing everyone has done and argues that it's just he knows better than anyone else, he's not going to get his way. If he wants to write the way it is, write it that way, cite it, and be prepared to defend it. Don't ignore the responses, say "I know better", revert it all, put a post on the talk page that and then go off in a huff because someone else questioned you. That sentence was (and remains) completely unclear. I'll make this quite clear. I'm going to ignore all arguments that hinge on "you shouldn't edit this because you haven't read it." Give that bit up. If I'm not clear on something, change it to be more accurate. I freely admit I haven't a clue, revise the details so it is accurate; I'm just trying to make it understandable and in line with the ] and all the other varied policies we have. I haven't touched the content section but simply wanted someone to provide sources. If that's so impossible, I'm sorry. I asked J.A. on his citations and if he continues to feel it is beneath him to respond, he is not going to win. In fact, that's a violation of ] policy and if he keeps it up, '''he''' will be blocked. It is entirely possible to write this entire article with a one or two sentence description of its contents and if everyone continues to play the "only a select number of editors can work here", that whole section will be wiped out and replaced. The article should be focusing on '''why''' the thing is important, not what exactly it claims. If we can't even do that, I'm going to list it for deletion and it will be gone. I will repeat myself: this is not a book report, it is an encyclopedia. See ] and many others for a much better style. -- ] (]) 02:00, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
**Looks like you want to dictate how the work shall be continued here??? To my best knowledge, J. A. Comment (let him/her to correct me if I am wrong) did not claim ownership of this article. Threats like the one above ' '''he''' will be blocked ' hardly could be accepted as a way to make this article better. You are forgetting existence of some other rules - civilty, effective and valid knowledge of the edited subject, for example. Forget your 'This is an encyclopedia '''anyone''' can edit and that's the issue.' - due to some very serious limitations to this rule. I am going to stop arguing with you and report the whole case to the Misplaced Pages Arbitration Committee.--] (]) 15:22, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
In the foreword of the Velika optužba (Magnum crimen): pola vijeka klerikalizma u Hrvatskoj, Volume 2 by Viktor Novak, Svjetlost, 1960 on the page 28 (found in the University of Michigan Library) is written in Serbo-Croatian language: | |||
::: Language like "only those who have read it I will talk with", constant reverts back to his views, and other terms indicate a desire to own the article. Also, go right ahead on an RFC if you would like. I always appreciate feedback. -- ] (]) 18:36, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
''... a Santo Officio stavio djelo na Index librorum prohibitorum, zacijelo žaleći samo što pisca njegova ne može da izvede na lomacu, da i s njime uprilici jedan monstruozno svecani ...'' | |||
==Perception of the book as an academic reference== | |||
Translation: ''... and Santo Officio put the work on the Index librorum prohibitorum, certainly regretting for not being able to burn the (book) writer at the stake ...'' | |||
This section is so POV so against wikipedia reliable source policy that it is hard to say. | |||
All first 3 sources are against ] policy. It is possible to write that this book is used like reference in other works but "book is accepted as a serious academic reference" is POV pushing because we are not having any source which is speaking that (] ?). | |||
As we all know it, that time Novak was alive and, apparently, as a serious author and the university professor, would not allow a false statement into the foreword of his book - if it were a false statement. | |||
Ricky81682 is having good point about William Bundy and for the end what is possible to say about Kljakic work which is published by Serbian ministry of propaganda (information) durign Croatia - Serbia war (]). | |||
As to the Index, after 1900 the Index became updateable. So some books were put then removed from this Index, which makes historians to dig through other sources of information (newspapers, books) to get the truth. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 15:51, 14 October 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
For anybody neutral it must be clear that it is very hard to find good NPOV comments about this book so we are having POV pushing, misleading section--] (]) 15:14, 2 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
See also: Le génocide occulté: état indépendant de Croatie, 1941-1945 by Marco Aurelio Rivelli, Published by L'AGE D'HOMME, 1998 page 18: | |||
: Well, Rjecina, looks like just you and me here. Since no one else likes discussion, let's shoot. The section shouldn't be "here are some academics who mention the book" but instead "what do academics actually say about the book." I think Bundy is just incomplete and Kljakic's name belongs in the footnote, not in the article (he is saying what the Vatican did, there's no need for his name there). If there's no objection, I'll deal with Kljakic at least. For Bundy, it's just an issue of getting the exact quote from him and reading the next paragraph or so to flesh things out. If someone finds that constructive criticism so hostile, I really don't know what to say. Also, in regards to NPOV, this may not be the type of book that lends itself to neutrality and that's fine. The point is that we have neutral descriptions of the commentary, not that the comments themselves be neutral. For example, the ] doesn't really have a positive section but just criticism. From the sounds of it, everyone here seems to be saying that the book is for its source collection and perhaps a little biased in its descriptions. If so, that's perfectly fine. That may be the reason why it is notable anyway. -- ] (]) 05:48, 3 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
''Loin de se repentir, donc, le Vatican s'est tu. L'auteur d'un ouvrage sur ce massacre, le Dr Viktor Novak, historien yougoslave d'origine croate, a vu son ceuvre, Magnum Crimen, publiée à Zagreb en 1948, à l'Index librorum prohibitorum en meme temps qu'il etait excommunié''--] (]) 20:03, 17 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
Also, for everyone's information, no one says that the sources have to be in English. Note that all the citation templates (], ], ], etc.) have a language parameter. For those who read Serbian, why not help me get through the or ? Just provide a link and a ''neutral'' description of what's said and I'll happily put it in. -- ] (]) 06:09, 3 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
:Commentary about Magnum Crimen: | |||
:Commentary of Vasilije Kvesić in "Srpsko-hrvatski odnosi i jugoslovenska ideja u drugoj polovini XIX veka" is:"First and greatest, but only try in truth discovery about roots of genocide in Ustaše ISC is made by Viktor Novak with his book Magnum Crimen". This is all (page 342). | |||
:Commentary from Ljetopis Jugoslavenske akademije znanosti i umjetnosti (Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts): "In 1948 Viktor Novak has published ] work about history of church in Croatia and Vatikan policy in Yugo....."--] (]) 22:00, 4 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
*Calling upon (baselessly) Misplaced Pages rules - as Rjecina did it above - does not prove anything what she was claiming. I would accept some improvements of this section, the denial - not. Rjecina shall stop disqualifying J. A. Comment work - which is just a continuation of Rjecina's harassment of this author that lasts several months.--] (]) 01:14, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
::It is common knowledge that the Index was last updated in 1948. Its entire content is accessible online (for example, ) and there is no mention of Novak in there. In fact there is no piece of evidence coming from the allegedly banning authority (Catholic Church) that they ever banned the book. The only ones claiming so were ''Narodni list'' (in 1948), Novak himself (in the 1960 edition) and Rivelli (in 1998, for whom we have no idea where he got that information from). Until someone actually finds a source confirming that the book was banned by the Vatican from 1948 to 1966 (when the Index was abolished), I will delete this claim. ] (]) 19:56, 4 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
:: While I disagree and feel that the sources are reliable, claims that it is "accepted as a serious academic reference" is a bit out there, don't you think? When it is this difficult to find anyone who really says anything beyond facts (either of the fact or of what other people have done in response), is that really an accurate representation? Either way, I find that whole sentence a ] sentence that really isn't necessary. Don Luca, if you have an opinion, why not find a source and offer something in response? J.A.'s attitude that only his misformatted, unwikified version should be around is the reason this article got protected. Be prepared to defend yourself. Assume Rjecina's transaction is accurate, the first comment is just strange without a greater context. Kvesic I guess is saying that Novak found out the "truth" about the Utase genocide, but that just seems to indicate an agreement with his view. I don't understand what he means. As to the Academy, describing it as "polemical work" doesn't really say much. It clearly does criticize the Vatican and the Church. A neutral description indicates that clearly. This is impossible to do with just snippets of book text. You need clear context to understand the author's point. What I am looking for criticism or praise like the quote from Harris, where he feels Novak's Croatian "clero-fascism" is an exaggeration of the atrocities, done for political reasons (which is exactly what I spent time reading and writing until because "I haven't read the book the way he has"). Whether or not Harris is right is irrelevant to me. I cannot and should not be trying to answer that question with this article (that is what ] means). It is a view of Novak's work and a neutral description of what Harris says. That's the best I can offer. The people who only want praise or criticism are the problem. Either accept it all or the whole section should go. -- ] (]) 01:37, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::Delete only if providing a credible reference supporting the claim that this book was not on the Index. The Index was updated i.e. its content was changed which means that some entries were removed. The online index is apparently incomplete. For example, Malaparte's La Pelle was prohibited by Roman Catholic Church and was on the Index, which is not visible on this online list. Moreover, on are not even Bacon, Galileo, Descartes, Milton, Pascal, Locke, Voltaire, Hume, Russeau, Flaubert, Zola, Sartre who were prohibited by RCC as per ''How to Be an Existentialist: or How to Get Real, Get a Grip and Stop Making Excuses (Google eBook) by Gary Cox, A&C Black, Jun 1, 2010 page 116''--] (]) 12:47, 5 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
::::A "credible source" is what I linked above. It lists the entire 1948 edition of the Index (which is the only version that could have theoretically included Novak). Galileo, Flaubert and the like may have been censored previously but have been removed from the list by 1948. Unless you can produce an actual Catholic Church source listing Novak's book as prohibited (or censored or whatever), this is just unverified hearsay from second and third hand sources. Equally dubious is the claim that Novak had been a Catholic priest at any point in his life - the 1986 edition is available online and neither the publisher's introduction, Blazevic's foreword nor Horvat himself mention anywhere that Horvat had ever actually been a priest. The 1950 review by Neumann (which you and Milos insist on copying word-for-word) seems to be full of factual errors. ] (]) 13:23, 5 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::::Counter references by references, if you have any, not by your opinion.--] (]) 17:11, 5 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
::::::It does not work that way. Oskar Neumann could have just as well written that Catholics are really ] back in 1950. But that does not mean we should take it for granted. On the other hand, every single book ever included in the Index is well documented as we have access to all editions of the Index. And Novak is not present in any of them. So Neumann obviously had no clue what he was talking about. ] (]) 14:41, 6 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Please, stop writing nonsense. The is apparently a fragment of the real Index, therefore a false reference per se.--] (]) 15:17, 6 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Where does it say it is "a fragment" exactly? Does it even matter? Is there any list published anywhere by anyone at any time which includes Magnum Crimen in it? Or do you think that having a ''secret'' list of prohibited books contributes to their prohibition in public usage? Lol. ] (]) 15:53, 6 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
== Alphascript Publishing reference == | |||
Also, Don Luca, if your argument is based solely on Rjecina criticizing J.A., I criticized him as well in large part for his actions (and especially for his lack of action on the talk page once the article got protected). Believe me, I know what the rules mean and how they apply. Rjecina is wrong that the sources are not reliable. They at least seem to be. -- ] (]) 01:37, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
I've removed the following ] reference: | |||
== Mile Budak quote == | |||
:The latest, and the most comprehensive (80 pages long) survey of this book, is the one edited by Miller, Vandome and McBrewster: Magnum Crimen by Frederic P. Miller (Editor), Agnes F. Vandome (Editor), John McBrewster (Editor) ], London (March 5, 2010) ISBN-10: 6130717385, ISBN-13: 978-6130717384. ] (]) 23:23, 21 July 2010 (UTC) | |||
Ok, this is a secondary source, but an article in ''The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science'' cites page 605 of the 1986 version as saying: | |||
:Mile Budak, a minister and a deputy head of state in the Pavelic's Ustasha government in Croatia, is on record as stating at a rally in Gospic on 22 July 1941, "One part of the Serbs we shall kill, another part we shall resettle in other places, and the remaining part we shall convert to the Catholic faith and thereby melt into Croats." | |||
Would anyone object if I threw that into the article (citing the article citing the page)? Someone who has the actual book should be able to find it and correct me. However, this will really throw all the J.A.'s ibids into a mess since (I'm guessing) he is using the 1948 version and I don't want to introduce confusion. -- ] (]) 06:17, 3 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
*Well, J. A. Comment follows this book review based on its 1948 edition. The 1986 edition has two authors - V. Novak and J. Blazevic. So, if it makes sense taking quotes from this edition - it must be clear which work it is - Blazevic's or Novak's. Also, if a latter edition shall be mentioned - then it makes sense to do it only if pointing at differences between the first and the latter.--] (]) 01:21, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Alleged racist attitude of clergy? == | |||
:: I'm only concerned about people being able to find sources if they are paginated differently. Otherwise, contentwise, where should this go? The whole content section is a mess of history, theories about church doctrine, and just random asides. Again, I took J.A.'s work and split it into subheadings so that the difference between the complete history and the random asides are clear. Again, reverted, so what now? My biggest problem was that there were never any dates or any real details in the article (just vague references to time). If the book really is a great scholarly work, it should have that level of detail. I guess it should go after "the Ustache terrorism" (oh that word should go too) sentence. That sentence though is extremely conclusionary. -- ] (]) 01:45, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
Here is an excerpt (page 990) | |||
Page 990<br> | |||
Nadbisku Stepinac svake godine o Novoj godini predvodi svoje svećenstvo Paveliću | |||
i pozdravlja Pavelića sa željama da Pavelić uspije i do kraja izvrši "konsolidaciju" | |||
NDH moli za dug život Pavelića i njegove uspjehe a tako isto i na njegov imendan 13 VI | |||
i na rođendan 14 VII. Sam najsvečanije celebrira in pontifikalibus o godišnjici NDH | |||
i dopušta da se u katedrali najsvečanije izvode zadušnice za najvećeg ustaškog krvnika | |||
komandanta "Crne legije" Juru Francetića. | |||
There is far more about the clergy and their involvement in monstruous crimes committed during the WWII--] (]) 01:54, 24 October 2010 (UTC) | |||
== Online and downloadable this book pdf copy == | |||
Please, add it to the article sources. --] (]) 01:05, 2 March 2011 (UTC) | |||
==Request for comment about Magnum Crimen== | |||
{{RFChist | section=Request for comment about Magnum Crimen !! reason=We are having editorial style dispute about this book article !! time=04:41, 6 October 2008 (UTC)}} | |||
== Magnum Crimen == | |||
There is agreement between editors about need for RFC and now I am escaping from further discussion about this article.--] (]) 02:41, 6 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
: In my (somewhat biased) view, the issue stems from whether we should be following J.A. Comment's ] before editing this article and ] or not. The main issue is that the article has been protected for two weeks now with nothing but criticism for "defending my and no other attempt at dialogue. If others feel my since protection are an abuse of my admin powers, I will revert them and wait until protected is lifted. -- ] (]) 04:01, 6 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
*Just one minor comment - use of ''ibid'' is very strongly discouraged on Misplaced Pages, for obvious formatting reasons... ]<sup>]</sup> 16:49, 6 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
**Which ''obvious formatting reasons...''???--] (]) 22:33, 6 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Misplaced Pages has built-in automatic numbering of references. The use of "ibid" conflicts with that facility so subsequent editing can disrupt reference associations. If you want a single source to be cited more than once, give that reference a name. If you don't know how to do it, find an article where it has been done, and follow the same formatting. It's not rocket science. ] (]) 22:40, 6 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::Yup - an egregious example , where text has been reorganised, making nonsense of the Refs section. ]<sup>]</sup> 09:20, 7 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
**That will not work if I want to cite page and/or a text on the same page. This is not Misplaced Pages's built-in ... - it's a bad feature of the html editor that Misplaced Pages uses.--] (]) 01:15, 7 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
::: Um, yes it will. See, for a simple example, what I did . It's not that hard. If you wanted to quote the text, go ahead and do it as separate cites, but there isn't a need for ibiding everything. For example, it currently would be impossible for me to include secondary or other sources into the middle of the content section without having to completely rewrite the entire thing every time. -- ] (]) 04:53, 7 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
*''Ibid'' is unsatsifactory. "ref name" works alright if it is exactly the same reference, but not for different pages. The best solution is to use some short form of the title on the 2nd and later occasions, such as Smith 1975 or Smith, ''Book Title''. I am not sure if this is all the RFc is about or somthing more. ] (]) 16:01, 7 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
**The RfC should be about much more, but wasn't submitted very well. Many of the issues stem from how criticism of the book should be presented and its reception as a genuine scholarly work or propaganda material. ]]] 16:27, 7 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
**''(ec)'' I think the RfC is actually about more than just that. Ricky81682 commented above that a proposed edit would, as a side effect, muck up the ibids, so I left a comment regarding that. Apologies if I've gone off on a tangent :P ]<sup>]</sup> 16:30, 7 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
Please, has anyone ever translated this book (or a summary or excerpts of it) in English, or French or any other language? | |||
My issue was not the "ibids" at all, but that they are part of a larger issue: should the article only be edited by people who have demonstrated sufficient knowledge of the book to satisfy the views of certain users? The ibids came up because I had changed all the ibids (with other edits but after a discussion above and for the second or third time as editors keep reverting versions without discussion) and then was by ] (a.k.a. ) and then by ]. I seem to be working against consensus here (not really discussed consensus but a reverting consensus) and wanted comment on whether to follow consensus or keep on forcing the issue. There's also my concern about . Does anyone see a compromise to either everyone reverting or just staying with a single version that makes sense? -- ] (]) 04:00, 8 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
If you have any information about this (or about such a project) please contact me: | |||
:My impression is that the resistance to change on the article is arising from a fundamental misunderstanding of editing criteria on the part of some editors. Every edit we make comes with the caveat "If you don't want your writing to be edited mercilessly by others, '''do not submit it.'''" Nowhere in any of Misplaced Pages's policies do we find anything that says "You must be familiar with a subject before editing it". Our task is to ], so editor interpretation is specifically against policy. The assumption that one must have prior knowledge about a subject seems to be leading to some editors taking ] of the article, in the mistaken belief that their expertise validates their edits and invalidates everyone else's. | |||
:Regarding a solution, first I think we have to be very clear that subject expertise, while useful, is '''not''' a prerequisite for editing. Because of the prohibition on original research, the information in the article should come from the book itself - as description, not editor analysis - and from commentaries published by other writers/critics. Continued displays of article ownership, and reversions made on that basis, must lead to sanctions against the accounts involved. I would favour a one- (or even zero-) revert policy on the article, with perhaps a mandatory 24-hour block for violations. | |||
:Secondly, Misplaced Pages's ] and ] policies should be scrupulously followed. It might be useful to start by agreeing on acceptable sources before looking at the article itself. The next step might be to identify those areas that are causing the problems; remove the associated text to the talk page or a sub-page; and discuss until a version can be reached that everyone is happy with, at which point it could go back into the article. I'm aware this may be a wildly optimistic assessment, and agreement may not be possible, but in my experience those editors who are here to push a POV lack the patience and objectivity required for such a collaborative process, and an unwillingness to compromise or participate in good faith soon makes itself apparent...at which point, appropriate measures can be taken ;) ]<sup>]</sup> 09:07, 8 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
::EyeSerene has put this pretty well. To be able to contribute effectively to this or any other article it is sufficient that an editor can provide information or comment which is relevant to the subject and which is verifiably sourced. I have encouraged editors who can to read the book and I have encouraged those who have read the book to contribute. But as I have said before, it is no more necessary for a contributor here to have read the book than it is for someone contributing to the Winston Churchill article to have known Winston Churchill. ] (]) 14:22, 8 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
jdebetz@gmail.com | |||
I came from the RFC page, to try to help out. I know absolutely nothing about Magnum Crimen. This looks like one of those situations where one or more people are not acting maturely or within the guidelines of Misplaced Pages. | |||
Thank you. | |||
First off, I must say that the article is written in poor English. It definitely needs a thorough edit from a good copy editor. | |||
Jean P.W. | |||
The correct format for Misplaced Pages, where there are multiple references to the same source, is to name references and enter separate ref's to each citations. Someone went to the trouble to put this article in correct format. Whoever reverted this, where someone had gone to the trouble of putting the article in correct Misplaced Pages form, needs to back off. | |||
English language translation of the book Magnum Crimen is available here (] www.magnumcrimen.org. | |||
The article itself needs more external citation and verification. It is very important that Misplaced Pages articles be set in the context of external review, if possible. | |||
Please, add it to the article sources. | |||
I see something in the discussion to the effect that "I am the expert in this field and nobody else should be changing anything I write". I'm sorry, but if this is your attitude, you are not likely to be an effective contributor to Misplaced Pages.] (]) 21:01, 16 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
==Locked== | |||
Why this article is locked for years?--] (]) 01:25, 15 December 2014 (UTC) | |||
:Because vandals and POV warriors circle here on a regular basis? ] (]) 01:45, 15 December 2014 (UTC) | |||
== |
== Reception unbalanced? == | ||
It is nowhere explained which way this book reception is unbalanced. I'd be glad to add more information if I see which way is the book reception unbalanced.--] (]) 15:16, 26 December 2014 (UTC) | |||
:Hello {{u|Milos zankov|Milos}} - actually, if you look at the prior version of the article, you'll see a comment pointing to ]. The explanation is there. I'd say that the problem with balance is still present. ] (]) 23:00, 3 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
:The edits your complaining about are fairly benign. He cleaned up some references and added a wikilink. Are you actually objecting? If so, I'd recommend reading ]. ]]] 01:18, 8 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
*I've read your comment and I couldn't accept Lovrenovic as a scholar. Not all comments are valuable. Any comment is welcome and acceptable if it's substantiated and sourced. In addition, there are direct links to two negative comments John Neubauer and Robin Harris.. Harris' comment is an opinion, which, I don't think shall be inlined | |||
<blockquote> | |||
The scale of the atrocities which now occurred was subsequently greatly exaggerated for political purposes. Viktor Novak, in his slanderous work Magnum Crimen (1948), created out of it a theory of fifty years of Croatian "clero-fascism." | |||
</blockquote> | |||
--] (]) 16:50, 4 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
::Well, I did not suggest Lovrenović ''was'' a scholar: I quoted his words to illustrate a wider sentiment about the book. Also, I don't think that critical views of the book - if they're as strong and as widely held as in this case - have to come exclusively from scholars to be mentioned in the article. | |||
::The sentence about the "authors who left just short notes about this book" is the crucial problem. Authors who had positive things to say about the book are quoted, but it just so happens that Harris and Neubauer - with their extremely negative assessments - ''are not'', and their views are laconically summarized as merely "short notes about this book". This is precisely the lack of balance I was talking about. | |||
::I'll try to find more of the critical views and list them here. ] (]) 17:17, 4 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
*OK, let me fix 'short notes'--] (]) 17:33, 4 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::The ''Croatian Encyclopedia'' describes the book as "controversial" and notes Novak was actually ''excommunicated'' by the CC - maybe that's worth putting in, the intro only mentions an "anathema". | |||
:::After a quick scan of online sources I've found this: | |||
:::* Nothing much on the book in English beyond what is already in the article (but is not fleshed out, as agreed). | |||
:::* Many Croatian sources seem to mention the book only in passing. | |||
:::* Negative views come largely from sources associated with the CC - no surprise there. | |||
:::I'll be back with more details in a couple of days. ] (]) 18:03, 4 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
::::It makes sense to add a Croatian book review to the article, the more substance, the better. About Novak's ''excommunication'', I'd suggest to add this information to his biography.--] (]) 02:13, 7 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::::But it is precisely because of the ''book'' he got excommunicated, that's a remarkable fact (even more so than being added to the ''Index librorum prohibitorum''), so it deserves at least a mention. I might add it myself, I'll make a pass or two through the article. I think I'll gather some sources about the reception first - hopefully in a day or two. ] (]) 08:33, 7 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::::I am not against what you wrote above. If you think that his excommunication suits better to his book review than his biography, go ahead that way.--] (]) 12:25, 7 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
== English language edition == | |||
:: As I stated , if others feel this is an abuse of my powers, I will revert them. I also if anyone had anything they wanted done to the article. Don Luca, do you really feel that those should be reverted, just because I did them? -- ] (]) 03:11, 8 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
I've added this section to the article. The two omitted chapters are online available as the whole book (its earlier edition). Please, leave your comments here.--] (]) 16:28, 28 December 2014 (UTC) | |||
Also, that Harris description is a complete misrepresentation of what he says. He is not saying that the book has been criticized, but is actively criticizing the book (and doesn't mention Jasonovec at all). Read his article and you'll see the one sentence mention of the book. I really don't think we should be keeping misrepresentations like that. Contrast to . However, I don't feel like warring with J.A. who is set on his interpretation of what Harris means. -- ] (]) 04:08, 8 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
==Background== | |||
== Knowledge and 'ownership' == | |||
The Background section, added in by a blocked socketpuppet of User:Velebit, is identical to the summary published at . The Content section seems to be suffering from the same problem. ] (]) 00:39, 6 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
*The sockpuppet text, you are referring to, comes from Oscar Neumann. He says, | |||
:"The name of the author is not completely unknown to students of Latin paleography. Another question is how many of his articles and books on various aspects of Croat national history may have reached either private or public libraries in America. '''Viktor Novak, a Croat by birth, has been, since 1924, active among the Serbs.''' He has held the Chair of Croat History which was founded at the University of Belgrade in order to promote mutual understanding between the two kindred peoples." | |||
:in his book review article titled as: ''Novak, Viktor, Magnum crimen. Pola vijeka klerikalizma u Hrvatskoj (A Half Century of Clericalism in Croatia). Zagreb, 1948. Pp. 1124'' in ''Journal of Central European Affairs'' - Volume 10 - 1950 Page 63. | |||
:So, your rewording (''An ethnic Croat by birth, he has been, since 1924, active as a priest among ethnic Serbs, who are traditionally Orthodox.'') of the '''bold''' text above is actually rewording of a quote, and makes no sense. Please do not reword the article text if you just do not understand it. | |||
*Your "...edition was financed by a friend of Milorad Ekmečić, a Serbian nationalist historian, ..." is inaccurate (not friend, rather schoolmate), and tagging an historian as a nationalist is POV which has no place here. | |||
*The same text you tagged by {{fact}} and by {{clarify}} is unchanged for more than six years. Please, explain on the talk page why the tags are necessary. | |||
*Refrain from rewording the quoted text, too.--](]) 01:30, 7 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
::An example of unacceptable use of a source, according to ], is: | |||
I was harassed for over several months being acused as if I were a banned user. Now the other type of harassment is on table - I was accused that I want to 'owe' the article supported by the most ridiculous claim that 'everyone has right to contribute' even in the case of utter lack of basic knovledge of the edited topic. | |||
:::''Inserting a text—copied word-for-word, or with very few changes from a source under copyright—then citing the source in an inline citation after the passage that was copied, without naming the source in the text.'' | |||
::So, it's not that the original text should not be changed - if it's not an attributed quote ("according to Lutz, Novak was 'blah blah'"), it '''''must''''' be changed, i.e. paraphrased. ] (]) 08:46, 7 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
::Also, you have apparently removed some {{tl|cn}} tags. Note these need not be "explained" (what is there to "explain"?), and should not be removed without providing an inline ref. I'm therefore tempted to revert but let's see what {{u|Timbouctou}} has to say... ] (]) 12:01, 7 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
*Yes, you are right about plagiarizm. The source is added. I cannot accept yours "blah, blah". What I did is a usual way of citing authors in scholar works and Misplaced Pages nowhere is against it. Quotes are not necessary. '''Any rewording of someone's text must preserve the text original meaning, not distort it.''' There are numerous examples of such way of referencing other works. One mistake on my side, the author is Oscar Neumann which I fixed now. Quoted text cannot be reworded under no circumstances if the text is already quoted. | |||
*About {{tl|cn}}, yes it has to be elaborated. If one man thinks it's necessary, the other might not think so.--] (]) 12:17, 7 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
::To avoid a possible misunderstanding, "blah blah" was meant as a generic placeholder for quoted text, not as a reflection on the content. | |||
Wel, I owe the topic knowledge. I expect that those who want to be co-editor or the article text reviewer shall be at my level of the expertize or at a higher level. If someone mutilates the facts to the level of nonsense and after seeing his/her changes rejected by me - then feeling offended by my rejection of such 'changes' - fires back accusing me for grabbibg the article ownership, I would say that that person lacks also knowledge of the basic editorial ethics which is much older than Misplaced Pages. | |||
::I merely wanted to point out that your criticism of Timbouctou's paraphrasing was not valid. Regarding the choice between quoting and paraphrasing, this is an encyclopedia after all, so the latter is preferable to the former. It is not uncommon to have articles with hundreds of sources, and the text in which every other sentence began with "According to Smith, ..." and "According to Jones, ..." would be quite odd. | |||
::{{tl|Cn}} has to be elaborated? That's news to me. Is there anything to that effect in ] instructions, or anywhere else for that matter? | |||
::I have no time to take a closer look at the article - tomorrow perhaps. ] (]) 12:44, 7 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
*First of all, if calling upon Misplaced Pages guidance, you shall stop ridiculing my posts ("blah, blah", then "That's news to me"). Then, the second time you are falsely referring to Misplaced Pages guidance. From the ] instructions, "{{Citation needed}} (also known by the redirects {{Cn}} and {{Fact}}) is a template used to identify claims in articles, '''particularly if questionable''', that need a citation to a reliable source.". Therefore, provide the proof that the marked text is questionable.--] (]) 22:54, 7 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
::As I already said, "blah blah" was meant to be a generic placeholder, not a comment on the text and definitely ''not'' ridicule. Sorry if that led to a misunderstanding. | |||
::The "news to me" part may have sounded sarcastic, but that was not my intention at all. I meant it in a quite literal sense: a surprise for me, because I've been editing the English Misplaced Pages for almost 10 years now and I'm completely unaware of a guideline that would require an explanation as a prerequisite for using a {{tl|cn}}. Of course, I could be wrong about this, but nothing in the template's instructions suggest this is so. It's "''particularly'' if questionable", not "''only'' if questionable". The same instruction clearly says that "an editor may add this template to any uncited passage for any reason", the only exception being "common well-known facts" (e.g., "the Moon orbits the Earth"). Note also ] criterion #2. I believe this should be abundantly clear. If you disagree with this interpretation, you're free to ask for a second opinion at the Village pump or some other venue. ] (]) 23:18, 7 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
==User:Milos zankov== | |||
So, I see that I am practically blocked to continue working on this article. I see that some of those who are teaming up with Rjecina in further harassment - is changing the text regardless the discussion i.e. for him/her article protection is not mandadory. This is just a proof who actually grabbed the article ownership. | |||
I have reverted wholesale changes by Milos and would like him to dicuss these changes point by point here. A word of advice - arguing that something had been "in the article for six years" is not really an argument. Also, there is a difference between ''referencing'' a fact by supplying its source and directly quoting every single thing ''verbatim'' as it appears somewhere. ] (]) 14:18, 7 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
*Intentional distortion of the quoted text then deleting reference and changing the referenced text arbitrarily is vandalism. Refusal to justify your changes in the text is refusal to collaborate. All this is against the five pillars of Misplaced Pages.--] (]) 22:46, 7 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
::I'm afraid you are going to be more specific than that in order for your comments to be taken seriously. What do you mean by "intentional distortion of the quoted text"? Examples, please. Also, I believe I have a good grasp of the five pillars you are referring to after spending some 9 years on Misplaced Pages. You have been here less than a month. Simply saying that other editor's contributions are crap and reverting ''ad nauseam'' will hardly help your case. ] (]) 10:32, 8 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
== A reset == | |||
Regardless on the threat that I'll be blocked if I revert frivolous text changes - I'll be back as soon as this block of editorial rights on this article expires. I'll enter any discussion of the effective ways leadind to the article text improvements with people of profound knowledge of this book and who are ready to follow the editorial code of conduct as described by Misplaced Pages.--] (]) 21:44, 10 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
May I suggest a reset of the discussion? | |||
: The editorial code of conduct does not require knowledge of the material, or more specifically knowledge of the material at a level you defined. I had no problem if you simply revised my changes to correct the meaning (a source would have been helpful). My problem was a complete revert of formatting changes and including part to a version which (still there) includes a massive misinterpretation of what one of the "critics" you list actually says. Your choice to remove all the fact tags as well did not help the situation. There are serious concerns about the accuracy of what is written in the article. In regards to Rjecina, the last two attempts to change the article ended with ] reverting them and Rjecina has been warned and even blocked over the sockpuppet allegations. If you have particular editors in mind who you think are "teaming up" with Rjecina, you should come out and say it. -- ] (]) 02:31, 11 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
::I can only echo what Ricky has said. Subject expertise is useful on Misplaced Pages in as far as it can help editors to know where to find secondary sources, and what weight to assign to them. However since we are forbidden from making original analysis, writing from personal knowledge can be counterproductive and can also make it difficult to write neutrally if strong opinions are held about a subject. It's good that you've said you are prepared to discuss editorial changes, but comments like "I expect that those who want to be co-editor or the article text reviewer shall be at my level of the expertize or at a higher level" are extremely unhelpful (not to mention specifically against policy), and if you insist on maintaining this attitude, your time here will be frustrating, unproductive, and short. ]<sup>]</sup> 08:45, 11 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::J A Comment, I have tried many times to explain how you could make a valuable contribution to this article. No doubt much of what you have tried to add is valid, but you do need to give references either from the book itself (ie page numbers from a specified edition) or from other sources. Instead of deleting the fact tags, you could almost as easily have replaced them with the source information required. It seems to me that you are determined not to understand.] (]) 15:07, 11 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
We all want to see an improvement to this article. As I already noted, I'm satisfied with the general direction and I think changes are generally a good thing. I really appreciate the willingness and effort that's behind them, even if I disagreed with some of the edits. | |||
== About V. Novak == | |||
Let's discuss our concerns here and refrain from major changes without prior explanation (preferably discussion). That's all there is to it. There is no deadline. I'm sure the article will benefit. ] (]) 12:09, 8 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
Dr. Novak was a member of the Yugoslav Academy of Science and Arts in Zagreb. See | |||
== Questions related to basic editorial rules, validity of the text changes, and civilty == | |||
''Ljetopis Jugoslavenske akademije znanosti i umjetnosti by Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti Zagreb 1979'' | |||
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This article was in a stable state for more than six years. Now we are facing with | |||
*Removal of the references | |||
*The referenced text altered after removing reference: "Novak was a Croat by birth, and he has been, since 1924, active among the Serbs" turned into "An ethnic ] by birth, he has been, since 1924, active as a priest among ethnic Serbs, who are traditionally Orthodox." | |||
*Huge number of ''clarify'', ''fact'', and ''POV'' without any justification or explanation on the talk page, and refusal to do it, when asked; | |||
*POV and disqualifying: "As reported by the Serbian daily '']'', the publication of the English language edition was financed by a friend of ], <u>a Serbian nationalist historian</u>, who also wrote the foreword to the edition". | |||
* Sidetracking of the issues arised on the talk page, baseless accusations for not following Misplaced Pages rules and ridiculing the opponents in discussion | |||
**Examples: I requested avoiding removal of references and distortions of the quoted text which was countered by ridiculing the request "<u>it's not that the original text should not be changed - if it's not an attributed quote ("according to Lutz, Novak was 'blah blah'"), it must be changed</u>" by ] then again by the same user "<u>That's news to me</u>". The next incivilty was addressing me, not the issue: "<u>User:Milos zankov, I'm afraid you are going to be more specific than that in order for your comments to be taken seriously".</u> even though I was very specific in my written request earlier on the talk page, which user ] refused to address and then the most outrageous and false claim came from the same user "<u>Simply saying that other editor's contributions are crap and reverting ''ad nauseam'' will hardly help your case.</u>" | |||
To verify the quotes see and . | |||
where he was listed as a member of this Academy on page 58 and his biography given on pages 673-4 | |||
*WorldCat is an academic inter library search engine in use worldwide and Troicki's review of Magnum Crimen is not questionable therefore all valid references. | |||
*''Serbian reprint Amid a <u>rise in nationalism</u> in Yugoslavia in the 1980s Magnum Crimen was reprinted in Belgrade in 1986, the same year as the SANU memorandum. Dragoljub Živojinović and Dejan Lučić also released their Varvarstvo u ime Hristovo: prilozi za Magnum Crimen (Barbarity in the Name of Christ: Supplements for Magnum Crimen) in 1988. Magnum Crimen was released with a new foreword by Jakov Blažević, a <u>lifelong communist official and the prosecutor</u> at the trial of Aloysius Stepinac.'' burdened by political connotations which are un-encyclopaedic per se and of no importance to this book review. | |||
*The addition "''According to the same article, the publication of the English translation intentionally coincided with the start of the trial for mutual lawsuits in the Croatia–Serbia genocide case before the International Court of Justice, so that "the world would be informed about Ustashe crimes against Serbs during the Second World War".''" is completely fabricated and not verified by reference . | |||
*Logical fallacy: "''According to Croatian historian Bogdan Krizman, he was present at a meeting where his father Hinko Krizman (then minister of social politics in the new Croatian communist government), Duško Brkić (then minister of justice) and Viktor Novak agreed to prepare the work for Stepinac's trial. Ultimately, it was published by the state Publishing Institute of Croatia in 1948.''" | |||
:Stepinac's trial ended in September 1946, this book was finished and published in 1948. Krizman nowhere said it, it's Kristo's who said 'Krizman said'. | |||
:At the end, the described behavior of the users mentioned in this request for comment and damaging text changes shall be stopped.--] (]) 18:28, 10 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
I've added this reference and replaced ibid. by Magnum Crimen . | |||
===Comments=== | |||
*''Serbian reprint Amid a <u>rise in nationalism</u> in Yugoslavia in the 1980s Magnum Crimen was reprinted in Belgrade in 1986, the same year as the SANU memorandum. Dragoljub Živojinović and Dejan Lučić also released their Varvarstvo u ime Hristovo: prilozi za Magnum Crimen (Barbarity in the Name of Christ: Supplements for Magnum Crimen) in 1988. Magnum Crimen was released with a new foreword by Jakov Blažević, a <u>lifelong communist official and the prosecutor</u> at the trial of Aloysius Stepinac.'' burdened by political connotations which are un-encyclopaedic per se and of no importance to this book review. | |||
:::I don't see how separating a clearly political book from its political context is even possible in an encyclopedic article about the book, so I would tend to disagree. It is common knowledge that there was a "rise in nationalism" in the 1980s in Yugoslavia, and "lifelong communist official" is merely a pretty neutral factoid that helps explain who Blažević was. Also, please acquaint yourself with the way discussions are led on Misplaced Pages. Adding your comments inside your previous comments makes the entire thread difficult to follow. ] (]) 23:36, 12 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
::Edit-warring will hardly get you anywhere and I refuse to discuss this wholesale. List your concerns point by point if you want to engage in a fruitful discussion. Thanks. ] (]) 19:10, 10 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
His 'Magnum sacerdos' - the second part of his trilogy - was published under the title ''Josip Juraj Štrosmajer: apostol Jugoslovenske misli by Viktor Novak, Savez sokola kraljevine Jugoslavije, Beograd, 1941'' | |||
::Oh and btw is not a "reference". It is somebody's translation of the primary source, published on somebody's blog. Please discuss changes you want to see introduced here ''before'' altering the article. If you are able to provide reasonable arguments for your edits we will not have a problem. If you don't, we will. Thanks. ] (]) 19:13, 10 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
::The RFC displays a serious violation of ]. I'm not interested in further involvement with the article under these circumstances. I'm therefore removing it from my watchlist, but I'll be still available for comments. ] (]) 15:15, 11 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
* I have concerns about the attitude apparent in this RFC. The edits complained about seems to me quite reasonable. The requestor appears to have assumed ] and seems unwilling to ]. Statements like "...and shall be stopped." are not helpful and indicate a readiness to "edit war". Please remember that Misplaced Pages is a collaborative project and wikipedians need to have a thick skin. Complaints about incivility are based on very scanty evidence. Additionally, I agree with the removal of references that originate from a foreign language blog. ] (]) 23:13, 18 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
*@] Never had an idea that I own the article. The Good Faith must be demonstrated not required after bad words about me. Solicited comment for seeing just one side?--] (]) 02:45, 25 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
:: I was randomly selected to comment on this RFC. See my talk page. Your inability to assume good faith is telling. ] (]) 00:15, 27 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
*User ]: Your comment should be impartial and honest. At least, you should notice that this RfC was vandalized by ] several times, his bad words about scholars, other user, the book are not a proof of good faith, soliciting publicly support from his compatriot administrator, etc. See more below.--] (]) 12:44, 3 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
*'''RfC''' The article change history shows that the copyright violation is on the .org side which copied most of the Misplaced Pages article. Removal of the valid and already used reference, then tagging a paragraph with POV makes no sense which ] did. Rewording a quoted text is a bad practice, assumption of the article ownership is on the ] side. I do not read Serbo-Croatian, therefore abstaining from a detailed comment about the content and I'll fix which I see wrong. In addition, I agree with the RfC request saying that numerous clarification-needed and citation-needed shall be discussed and justified--] (]) 12:44, 3 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
::FYI we ''don't know'' if the "quoted text" is indeed quoted, as it is not represented as a quote at either magnumcrimen.org, nor was it referenced when it was originally added in by a blocked socketpuppet. The only idea that any of the text is "quoted" comes from Milos Zankov, a single purpose account who showed up some four years later and who had nothing to do with adding the "quote" in the first place. Also, the "quoted text" is way too long to be considered a quote, and even if we had a reference and page number for it - we still wouldn't be able to use it because of plagiarism. But even if all that is deemed irrelevant - the fact remains that the majority of the article which Milos Zankov wants to see unchanged and included in the article WAS COPIED VERBATIM from a WEBSITE WHICH SAYS IT HOLDS COPYRIGHT TO ITS ENTIRE CONTENT, AS STATED ON THE SAID WEBSITE IN PLAIN VIEW. ] (]) 16:50, 3 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::]: Please, do not shout. Here is the proof that you are talking nonsense: https://www.google.com/search?q=Viktor+Novak%2C+a+Croat+by+birth%2C+has+been%2C+since+1924%2C+active+among+the+Serbs.+He+has+held+the+Chair+of+Croat+History+which+was+founded+at+the+University+of+Belgrade+in+order+to+promote+mutual+understanding+between+the+two+kindred+peoples.&btnG=Search+Books&tbm=bks&tbo=1&gws_rd=ssl . This link show you that the quoted text came from a reference dated back to 1950, way before the internet era, not from the .org.--] (]) 19:33, 3 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::Also read the Magnum Crimen footnote: ''Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Misplaced Pages® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.'' Therefore the Magnum Crimen article is copyrighted way before the .org article!--] (]) 19:39, 3 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
::::So entire paragraphs originally published in a (written by someone called O. Neumann about whom we know nothing about and presumably copyrighted) were copied verbatim (non-attributed to any source and unreferenced) to Misplaced Pages (which publishes its articles under creative commons), and then copied (unattributed) again to in 2015 (which claims copyright over its entire content). And then ] (and you yourself) edit-war on the article in order to have the 1950 text restored verbatim - but , (more specifically "Magnum Crimen , pages I-XV" - which even you yourself say is not really the source of the paragraph given. Sorry but this is a blatant case of ]. Which makes it even worse, as the entire paragraph needs to be deleted or paraphrased, including the vague descriptions such as "active among the Serbs" and the like. Using your circular logic ''anything'' copied to Misplaced Pages can become public domain by virtue of it being copied to Misplaced Pages. This is even more absurd since you and Zankov seem to prefer citing a '''book review''' for '''biography facts''' about the book's author, who was pretty well known, who was a member of the academy of science and whose biography must be available in a million other places. ] (]) 19:50, 3 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
*::::@] Please, refrain further from your old rant. There is no plagiarism because the whole paragraph you deleted is properly sourced now. You have to learn what is the plagiarism and when to use this word. A text written in 2015 () cannot be copied in 2010 (into ) because the time is not running backward.--] (]) 23:26, 3 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Read my comment a few more times and perhaps you may begin to grasp why your response makes absolutely no sense. Thanks. ] (]) 00:01, 4 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
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==Inappropriate text == | |||
--] (]) 23:56, 17 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
I've removed this addition | |||
== Kljakic and the ] == | |||
"The second part of Novak's trilogy Josip Juraj Strossmayer: apostol Jugoslovenske misli was published in 1941 by the state-sponsored Sokol Federation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, a unitarist organization founded in 1929. Its reprint in Belgrade in 1987 was retitled as Magnum Sacerdos" | |||
Kljakic says, in 1991, that the ''Magnum crimen'' has been placed on the ]. However, according to the wiki article, the list was abolished in 1966. It's possible that the book was placed there for a limited time but my concern is I cannot find it at . I think it should be reworded to reflect the fact that the list is now abolished. It tends to look badly on the Vatican. -- ] (]) 06:47, 1 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
:Please - regard fully previous edits - do not enter previously detected inaccuracies you are already warned about.--] (]) 13:17, 1 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
Don Luca Brazzi, I have reverted your changes. Ricky's edits were thoughtful and appropriate, and there is absolutely no justification for reverting them. Many thanks, ] (]) 13:19, 1 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
*No - you are wrong. First, read the book then come back with meaningful comments.--] (]) 13:22, 1 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
:Au contraire. First, please ] and remember that this is a collegiate project that moves forward by consensus. Perhaps you might like to bear in mind ] in your interactions with others. Secondly, the changes Ricky has made are mainly a combination of stylistic improvements and well-deserved fact tags for unsourced claims. Regarding the stylistic changes, these considerably improve the English in the text. It is folly to even think of reverting these. Regarding the fact tags, well, instead of reverting, perhaps you could find sources to support these claims, mmm?? ] (]) 14:31, 1 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
It is already visible who was publisher, for this reference is given. The phrases "state-sponsored" and "unitarist" have political connotation therefore they are just a personal opinion.--] (]) 22:21, 10 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
:: Also, comments are like are inappropriate, per the numerous discussions above. above, again, is against policy, as even the RFC with outsiders editors should show you. -- ] (]) 08:45, 2 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
:These hardly qualify as "personal opinion" if these facts are widely known and not disputed, per ], and one can argue pretty convincingly that these are relevant for providing a context for readers. I mean, this article is undoubtedly about a book that has some sort of a political agenda. ''Not'' saying who published it, where and when, would be misleading. ] (]) 23:09, 10 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
**What I see from J. A. Comment's rejection of his/her text changes made by Ricky81682 is - ''Portaryal of ... Stepinac does not matter chapters XV-XVIII - there is a lot more text in the previous chapters talking about Stepinac's work before WWII. When I added this paragraph - I did not mean that it is my final version of that paragraph.'' The same is valid for "Support for Ante Pavelic" - Pavelic is not mentioned just within I-XIV nor the Roman Catholic Church support to Pavelic is just contained within these chapters. It is not difficult to get this book from some library - then go through the book Index to find out why this arbitrary intervention in J. A. Comment's text just damages the original very god editorial work. I do not understand why someone wants to edit this text without proper knowledge of this subject? To protect the Misplaced Pages's credibility I am going to report the whole list of problems related to this article to the Misplaced Pages's ArbCom.--] (]) 15:22, 2 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
*]:''<u>This essay contains the advice or opinions of one or more Misplaced Pages contributors. Essays are not Misplaced Pages policies or guidelines.</u>'' | |||
::: I added subheadings because of the confusion. If they don't belong to the sections, I'll just move them out. It's not like those sections are clearly part of the history anyway. Also, J.A. has the book, let him decide how he wants it. Don't speak for him. If he doesn't want to come back because other people are going to edit his work, we move on. I have no clue what he was doing with his drafts but I am going to work with them as final text. This is a live encyclopedia; if he is going to take months editing and revising to add details, that's fine but others are going to mess with it in between. -- ] (]) 20:12, 2 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
*Also, the same essay ] says<br>Over-tagging<br>Misplaced Pages has several templates for tagging material that need verification: inline templates for particular lines, section templates, and article templates. See Misplaced Pages:Template messages. Sometimes editors will go through an article and add dozens of the inline tags, along with several section and article tags, making the article essentially unreadable.<br>then<br>Over-citing<br>Further information: Misplaced Pages:Citation overkill<br>Citations should be evaluated on the qualities they bring to the article, not on the quantity of citations available. The first 1 or 2 citations supporting a given point are informative; extra citations after that begin to be argumentative. Keep in mind that the purpose of a citation is to guide the reader to external sources where the reader can verify the idea presented, not to prove to other editors the strength of the idea. <br>Bottom line: Make difference between opinions and facts and better read and understand what you're suggesting for reading to others.--] (]) 17:34, 11 January 2015 (UTC) | |||
== Serbian reprint and First edition == | |||
**One thing more - it is meaningless to insert "A change in doctrine" - J.A. Comment says ''A change in doctrine is yet another nonsense. What doctrine and whose doctrine? This question cannot be answered by a person who never saw this book. There was no doctrine at all - there were two mutually exclusive understanding of the role of faith in a society. For Strossmayer - serving people equals serving God, Papal infallibility is nonsense - for Roman Curia - God is in Rome incarnated in Roman Pope and the Pope is infallible.'' - which I verified and found it (''There was no doctrine at all'') correctly interpreted and written.--] (]) 15:28, 2 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
::: From the reading we had the Strossmayer's doctrine and then the Church's enforcement of theirs. If it's different, correct it. Quit playing games of total reverts of my text without explaining ''what the text should be.'' There's a lot of "you are wrong, read the book" but no "here is what it should be instead." -- ] (]) 20:12, 2 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
''Amid a rise in nationalism in Yugoslavia in the 1980s Magnum Crimen was reprinted in Belgrade in 1986, the same year as the SANU memorandum. Dragoljub Živojinović and Dejan Lučić also released their Varvarstvo u ime Hristovo: prilozi za Magnum Crimen (Barbarity in the Name of Christ: Supplements for Magnum Crimen) in 1988. Magnum Crimen was released with a new foreword by Jakov Blažević, a lifelong communist official and the prosecutor at the trial of Aloysius Stepinac.'' | |||
== Rački, Trumbić, and Radić again == | |||
All above has a marginal meaning and it is written in a political tone with negative hints about someones bad intentions tied to this book. I removed the whole section as per ] and ]. | |||
Ok, I know I mentioned this in September ] but that went nowhere fast. I just don't understand what the Franjo Rački, Ante Trumbić, and Stjepan Radić divergence adds to the article. The section was focusing on Strossmayer and the church, which I assume the books focuses on. To go on for sentences about how the same fate (I'm not exactly sure how their "teachings were distorted nor mentioned ever" but again, it's all unsourced) from clergy members affected politicians just seems random. If that's in the book, fine, but I really don't think it needs that much details (including what their political struggles can be interpreted as). Also, I'll just say this now: before anyone responds with "read the book", I'll just say, you want it there, you explain it. If you can't or won't, there's no point in further discussion. If the thread goes off again, I'm just going to remove that entire unsourced section and move on. Frankly, there's a part of me that says that the Church is still a living organization and we shouldn't have so many unsourced statements. Maybe that would force everyone to actually look to improve this article instead of warring all the time. -- ] (]) 10:33, 2 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
Further, | |||
== Strossmayer's ideas == | |||
''According to historians Sabrina P. Ramet and Ljubiša S. Adamović, the work originated as preparation for the trial of Aloysius Stepinac in 1946. According to Croatian historian Bogdan Krizman, he was present at a meeting where his father Hinko Krizman (then minister of social politics in the new Croatian communist government), Duško Brkić (then minister of justice) and Viktor Novak agreed to prepare the work for Stepinac's trial. Ultimately, it was published by the state Publishing Institute of Croatia in 1948.'' | |||
Reviewing ], does the book argue that it was Strossmayer's idea that "serving God equaled to serving people" or that "introducing the Old Slavonic language as the liturgical language of the Roman Catholic Church in the Balkans" created the close relations? That sentence is so vague that it could be either. If it was both (most likely), I'd probably reword it to something like "Roman Catholic bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer worked to create close relations between the Croatian and Serbian peoples in the region, by advocating that serving God equaled to serving the people and through the introduction of the common Old Slavonic language as the liturgical language of the Roman Catholic Church in the Balkans. The Church leadership (who in particular?) instead wanted themselves in between, demanding ultimate obedience to the Roman Curia and unconditional love of the Roman Pope." What does everyone think? -- ] (]) 10:43, 2 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
*Again, please, read the book - in order to get clear answers to your questions. Do not re-word anything to avoid further damages of the existing text.--] (]) 00:45, 4 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
is a tell-tale which I removed from the First edition . | |||
== Excessive and unnecessary fact-ing == | |||
--] (]) 20:08, 5 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
:I assume only you and your alter ego agree with that proposal, so I guess you don't have consensus for that. The paragraphs above are valuable for the book publication's context. Again - Magnum Crimen is a political book, envisioned to promote a political goal, published exactly at moments when it was supposed to have political impact. Ignoring it all is hardly helpful. ] (]) 21:36, 5 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
::I told you, don't call upon your opinion. You are violating ] repeatedly. Avoid further any incivilty ("your alter ego")!--] (]) 15:20, 6 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::Edits need consensus and consensus consists of opinions. You don't ] this article, and neither does your sock/meat puppet Milos. Sorry. Perhaps you could write about this topic on your blog instead? ] (]) 15:50, 6 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
*@] I fully support your changes you have made. We see that Novak started writing Magnum Crimen in the autumn of 1941 and finished it in 1948. Apparently this book cannot be seen as a preparation work for the Stepinac trial which ended in 1946.--] (]) 17:48, 7 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
*As a support to Michelle's removal of ''the work originated as preparation for the trial of Aloysius Stepinac'' I offer the quote I found in the Broszat-Hory book, ''Als wichtigste Veröffentlichungen dieser Gattung sind zu nennen: Sudjenje Lisaku, Stepincu, Šaliću i družini ustaško-križarskim zločincima i njihovim pomagačima (Der Prozeß gegen die Verbrecher des Ustascha-Kreuzzuges, Lisak, Stepinac, Šalić und ihre Helfershelfer ) Zagreb 1946. Ferner; Viktor Novak: Magnum Crimen. Pola vijeka klerikalizma u Hrvatskoj (Das große Verbrechen. Ein Jahrhundert Klerikalismus in Kroatien) - Zagreb 1948. Werk (1119 S.) behandelt in seinem zweiten Teil die Zeit des Pavelic-Regimes. Es stützt sich dabei vornehmlich auf Dokumente aus den jugoslawischen Archiven der "Landescommissionen zur Erforschung der Verbrechen der Besatzungsmaechte und ihrer Helfershelfer" sowie die Ustascha und die kirchlich-katolische Presse in Kroatien''.--] (]) 20:17, 7 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
::]: I used google translate to understand the quoted text above. It's quite logical what Hory/Broszat wrote. --] (]) 12:39, 9 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
== Primary source vs secondary and tertiary references == | |||
I've removed a number of unnecessary {{fact}} - especially from this paragraph | |||
I added some secondary sources and now we have 14 secondary sources out of 36. I think that we can remove now the tag requesting additional secondary and tertiary sources.--] (]) 20:03, 7 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
''Nevertheless, Strossmayer was embraced as a great Roman Catholic bishop by the same clergy - but his teaching was distorted or not mentioned ever.{{Fact|date=November 2008}} The same destiny faced ], ], and ] - three Croatian politicians advocating actively and fighting for the Yugoslavism - as a common denominator of togetherness and life among the Slavic people of the kingdom of Yugoslavia.{{Fact|date=November 2008}} Rački was not even allowed to attend the Strossmayer's funeral ceremony - even though that he was an ordained Roman catholic Church priest and true Strossmayer's friend and follower.{{Fact|date=November 2008}} The Trumbić and Radić's struggle against centralism was interpreted as the Croatian and Slovene separatism support.{{Fact|date=November 2008}}'' | |||
::The majority of inline citations still refer to the primary material. That is not acceptable and should be improved. ] (]) 10:48, 9 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
*]: I see you added a number of references. We cannot expect that all references based on the book itself shall be replaced by secondary aand tertiary sources. This is the book review and we are supposed to read this book. I'm reading the English translation of this book. Go ahead and remove the tag if you want.--] (]) 12:36, 9 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
::Why can't we expect that? An article ''about the book'' is supposed to have information coming from people who we assume are experts and what they said ''about the book''. ] (]) 12:40, 9 February 2015 (UTC) | |||
::Let me just comment on using the book as a primary source: I believe it should be OK to use the book itself to support ''straightforward, non-interpretative claims about its content''. (I have not verified, though, that this is indeed the case here.) ] (]) 11:31, 25 September 2016 (UTC) | |||
== How long will ] be allowed to vandalise this aricle? == | |||
Looking at the book index - I see that the whole paragraph is pretty good overview of a large number of the book pages. Later - when finding more time and getting back the book in the library of my academic institution - I'll add the text where Racki complained for not being able to attend Strossmayer's funeral. | |||
Just curious, because his/her behaviour is hideous and the fact it is tolerated here makes Misplaced Pages as flippant about promulgation of extreme right-wing Croatian Ustashi ideology as the so-called "Croatian Misplaced Pages" (to wit: Misplaced Pages in that language) has been when it caused a stir all the way to Croatia's government and Misplaced Pages founders getting involved. | |||
This is happenning again, only now on Misplaced Pages in English where the likes of ] are removing everything that remotely informs on, let alone problematises, the facts of Croatian extreme right wing and Roman Catholic church in Croatia's atrocities. <small class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 03:10, 11 February 2015 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
==VATICAN'S HANDS OVER THIS ARTICLE?== | |||
The book re-view is not aimed to show that every sentence is justified by some citation. Whoever needs more detailed information about the book - will start reading the very book. --] (]) 01:08, 4 November 2008 (UTC) | |||
It is not possible to undertand what is MAGNUM CRIMEN! Too many details without importance are given but there is no simple explanation what it is all about? | |||
I suppose that Vaticans' paid agents have written some of parts that hide the truth and understanding and I suppose that it all about their crimes in Croatia over Serbs. The Jeruslaem Post has written in an article "Mass Grave of History: Vatican's WWII Identity crises" about priests who took part in competitons "who can split more Serbian throats in a night" . "On August 29, 1942, a friar from the monastery of Siroki Brijeg, named Petar Brzica, won first place for killing the most Serbs in the shortest time, boasting 1,350 throats slit in one night." write JP! <small class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 10:29, 14 September 2015 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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Mile Budak quote
Ok, this is a secondary source, but an article in The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science cites page 605 of the 1986 version as saying:
- Mile Budak, a minister and a deputy head of state in the Pavelic's Ustasha government in Croatia, is on record as stating at a rally in Gospic on 22 July 1941, "One part of the Serbs we shall kill, another part we shall resettle in other places, and the remaining part we shall convert to the Catholic faith and thereby melt into Croats."
Would anyone object if I threw that into the article (citing the article citing the page)? Someone who has the actual book should be able to find it and correct me. However, this will really throw all the J.A.'s ibids into a mess since (I'm guessing) he is using the 1948 version and I don't want to introduce confusion. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 06:17, 3 October 2008 (UTC)
- Well, J. A. Comment follows this book review based on its 1948 edition. The 1986 edition has two authors - V. Novak and J. Blazevic. So, if it makes sense taking quotes from this edition - it must be clear which work it is - Blazevic's or Novak's. Also, if a latter edition shall be mentioned - then it makes sense to do it only if pointing at differences between the first and the latter.--Don Luca Brazzi (talk) 01:21, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
- I'm only concerned about people being able to find sources if they are paginated differently. Otherwise, contentwise, where should this go? The whole content section is a mess of history, theories about church doctrine, and just random asides. Again, in my version I took J.A.'s work and split it into subheadings so that the difference between the complete history and the random asides are clear. Again, reverted, so what now? My biggest problem was that there were never any dates or any real details in the article (just vague references to time). If the book really is a great scholarly work, it should have that level of detail. I guess it should go after "the Ustache terrorism" (oh that word should go too) sentence. That sentence though is extremely conclusionary. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 01:45, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
Slobodan Kljakic
Can somebody please explain me how is possible that Slobodan Kljakic statement about book:"A major piece, written by the academician Viktor Novak..." is in article. Misplaced Pages reliable sources rule is clearly saying different thing. Serbian ministry of information during Serbo-Croatian war is reputable source like Nazi Germany ministry of information during Holocaust, Iraq ministry of information during Iraq-Iran war, ......
I am not having anything against this statement, but we must add more information about publication publisher and war situation or it is against wikipedia reliable sources rule and it must be deleted--Rjecina (talk) 09:14, 15 November 2008 (UTC)
- I don't know. However, we could mention that the Vatican listed it on the Index librorum prohibitorum, citing him. That's at least not controversial at all. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 09:36, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
- Hmm, now an odd problem. I can't see to find the book's listing on any of the lists (or databases) located at Index Librorum Prohibitorum. That's really strange. Maybe there's something more to your questions about its reliability, Rjecina. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 09:45, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
- I agree Ricky, I can't find much about this either. Except that the claim seems perhaps to have been first made not by Kljakić but by Novak himself in the 1960 edition. "Vatikana, a Santo Officio stavio djelo na Index librorum prohibitorum" ("The Vatican and Santo officio put the work on the Index librorum prohibitorum"). See this - although it is not clear exactly which work Novak is referring to. His own or another? Now, without any external verification, (I can see merely *possible* verification here), such a claim by the author himself, and repeated by Kljakić, would certainly need to be treated with a certain amount of caution. AlasdairGreen27 (talk) 10:29, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
- This is Index Librorum Prohibitorum from blogspot and nothing. Letter M and N, letter V
- In my thinking that statement has been true, but book publisher is not reliable. My mistake--Rjecina (talk) 12:08, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
- I agree Ricky, I can't find much about this either. Except that the claim seems perhaps to have been first made not by Kljakić but by Novak himself in the 1960 edition. "Vatikana, a Santo Officio stavio djelo na Index librorum prohibitorum" ("The Vatican and Santo officio put the work on the Index librorum prohibitorum"). See this - although it is not clear exactly which work Novak is referring to. His own or another? Now, without any external verification, (I can see merely *possible* verification here), such a claim by the author himself, and repeated by Kljakić, would certainly need to be treated with a certain amount of caution. AlasdairGreen27 (talk) 10:29, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
- Hmm, now an odd problem. I can't see to find the book's listing on any of the lists (or databases) located at Index Librorum Prohibitorum. That's really strange. Maybe there's something more to your questions about its reliability, Rjecina. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 09:45, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
It's been long enough. I removed the section here. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 04:50, 15 February 2009 (UTC)
- If this book wasn't on the list should it be removed from the list of banned books article (mirrored elsewhere...)? ChildofMidnight (talk) 04:57, 4 October 2009 (UTC)
- Is this particular article you have in mind? There's nothing linked here, and it's not at List of books banned by governments. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 07:10, 4 October 2009 (UTC)
- Nor at List of authors and works on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 07:11, 4 October 2009 (UTC)
- Oh, okay. In researching the article a bit I came across a bunch of mirror sites (http://www.google.com/search?q=Magnum+Crimen+Index+Librorum+Prohibitorum&rls=com.microsoft:en-us&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&startIndex=&startPage=1]) based on the Misplaced Pages article, but perhaps they are not updated and that bit was already removed from the relevant articles. Thanks for checking it out. ChildofMidnight (talk) 07:16, 4 October 2009 (UTC)
- Nor at List of authors and works on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 07:11, 4 October 2009 (UTC)
To counter assault on this article and its authors
I started writing the Russian version of this article based on the latest uncensored version of this article. My plan is to find people who could help me in writing French, Italian, and Spanish versions.--138.88.255.130 (talk) 13:37, 11 October 2009 (UTC)
Note about Vatican's ban
In the Serbian daily newspaper, Politika (February 21. 2006) there is an article ('Dva izostavljena poglavlja iz knjige Viktora Novaka' by Slobodan Kljakic) which one of its paragraphs states
Vatikan je Novakovu knjigu, ubrzo posto je objavljena, uvrstio u "moralnu kugu", stavljajuci je na Index Librorum prohibitorum. Kako je pisalo u zagrebackom "Narodnom listu" u jesen 1948 godine, "Vatikan je i ovdje postupio po starom receptu: Sant' Officio je rekao 'Spali!'" '
In short, the Politika states in their article that Vatican marked this book as a 'moral plague' putting it on the Index Librorum prohibitorum. The article quotes the Zagreb newspaper "Narodni list" (autumn 1948): "Vatican here acted according to the old recipe" Saint' Officio said 'Burn it'".
So, evidence is given here that this book was on the Index Librorum prohibitorum as of autumn 1948.--138.88.255.130 (talk) 16:16, 11 October 2009 (UTC)
- Yup, that's evidence... unless someone has a better source contradicting this? --DIREKTOR 16:17, 11 October 2009 (UTC)
- Is the article available online? ChildofMidnight (talk) 22:46, 11 October 2009 (UTC)
- Can you read Serbian?--138.88.255.130 (talk) 23:34, 11 October 2009 (UTC)
- Per above, isn't the fact that none of the versions of the Index at Index Librorum Prohibitorum include the book more persuasive? Just because it's a reliable source doesn't mean it's right. I think it's more likely a single author in a Serbian newspaper got it wrong over every single listing of the Index is wrong. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 00:11, 12 October 2009 (UTC)
- Hm come to think of it, the article quote above does not explicitly state the book was added to the Index Librorum prohibitorum... --DIREKTOR 00:33, 12 October 2009 (UTC)
- Per above, isn't the fact that none of the versions of the Index at Index Librorum Prohibitorum include the book more persuasive? Just because it's a reliable source doesn't mean it's right. I think it's more likely a single author in a Serbian newspaper got it wrong over every single listing of the Index is wrong. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 00:11, 12 October 2009 (UTC)
- Nonsense. Calling upon Misplaced Pages as a source? All universities, colleges and even high schools in America excluded Misplaced Pages as a reference for anything. Index Librorum prohibitorum was open by Vatican, but never went public i.e. there is no digitzed copies of any of the Index' lists.--138.88.255.130 (talk) 00:42, 12 October 2009 (UTC)
- I'm talking about the links provided here. I don't see it here, here or here. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 02:30, 12 October 2009 (UTC)
- The first 'here' is a Misplaced Pages garbage article. The second 'here' lists books up to 1559 (we are talking about 1948). The third 'here' is a garbage that lists some entries from 1990 and after, if selecting 'Serbian' as the language - which shows nothing in common with the index. The fourth 'here' gives an incomplete list of the Index until 1944, even though claiming up 1948 (we are talking about 1948). If typing the author's name in the third 'here', say Malaparte, I've expected to get the correct information: - La pelle, storia e racconto - Decr. S. Off. 31-05-1950 i.e. Malaparte's book La Pelle (The Skin) being put on the Index as of May 31, 1950 by the Decree of the Congregation of the Holy Office of the Inquisition. I did not get anything! This poor soul Ricky81682 continues throwing nonsense after nonsense. Does he still think that he deserves any attention here?--138.88.255.130 (talk) 23:15, 12 October 2009 (UTC)
- Did you mean this Malaparte? A source which I repeat again doesn't show Novak's work? If you could knock off the personal attacks, I'd be happy to discuss things reasonably with you. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 03:57, 13 October 2009 (UTC)
- You mentioned personal attacks, eh? All time you are calling upon references which have nothing in common with the subject. Can't you accept that the Bacon for Freedom of Expression does not have anything in common with the Index? If you ever saw the Index, then, as I mentioned it above, the Index will show the author name (say - Sartre, Jean-Paul), the scope of the prohibition (Opera omnia, i.e. all the works he wrote up to ... October 27, 1948) and the decree timestamp (-Decr. S. Off. 27-10-1948, i.e. Decree of the Congregation of the Holy Office of the Inquisition as of October 27, 1948). The Bacon has no single entry I've found in the Index. Please, be so kind, do not waste my time by harassing common sense and not showing any relevant knowledge of this subject.--MagnumCrimen (talk) 01:24, 14 October 2009 (UTC)
- Again, I got Beacon for Freedom from the listing here. If you want to continue to be insulting, feel free but, I will continue to question you about something that seems off. As noted above, all we have is a single Serbian newspaper article that mentions this (and it's questionable itself). The incivility though is tiresome, even as you do change IP addresses and names constantly. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 09:00, 14 October 2009 (UTC)
- Also, it's noted here that Sartre was on the list. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 09:03, 14 October 2009 (UTC)
- Please, pay attention to the facts:
Slobodan Kljakic is a university professor who published a book that passes the scrutiny of an editorial board
We have below information coming from Prof. Novak - his book was on the Index
The Index condemnation was echoed in Narodni list (newspaper).--166.32.193.81 (talk) 13:06, 16 October 2009 (UTC)
- Please, pay attention to the facts:
- Also, it's noted here that Sartre was on the list. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 09:03, 14 October 2009 (UTC)
- Again, I got Beacon for Freedom from the listing here. If you want to continue to be insulting, feel free but, I will continue to question you about something that seems off. As noted above, all we have is a single Serbian newspaper article that mentions this (and it's questionable itself). The incivility though is tiresome, even as you do change IP addresses and names constantly. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 09:00, 14 October 2009 (UTC)
More information about the Vatican ban
In the foreword of the Velika optužba (Magnum crimen): pola vijeka klerikalizma u Hrvatskoj, Volume 2 by Viktor Novak, Svjetlost, 1960 on the page 28 (found in the University of Michigan Library) is written in Serbo-Croatian language:
... a Santo Officio stavio djelo na Index librorum prohibitorum, zacijelo žaleći samo što pisca njegova ne može da izvede na lomacu, da i s njime uprilici jedan monstruozno svecani ...
Translation: ... and Santo Officio put the work on the Index librorum prohibitorum, certainly regretting for not being able to burn the (book) writer at the stake ...
As we all know it, that time Novak was alive and, apparently, as a serious author and the university professor, would not allow a false statement into the foreword of his book - if it were a false statement.
As to the Index, after 1900 the Index became updateable. So some books were put then removed from this Index, which makes historians to dig through other sources of information (newspapers, books) to get the truth. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 166.32.193.81 (talk) 15:51, 14 October 2009 (UTC)
See also: Le génocide occulté: état indépendant de Croatie, 1941-1945 by Marco Aurelio Rivelli, Published by L'AGE D'HOMME, 1998 page 18:
Loin de se repentir, donc, le Vatican s'est tu. L'auteur d'un ouvrage sur ce massacre, le Dr Viktor Novak, historien yougoslave d'origine croate, a vu son ceuvre, Magnum Crimen, publiée à Zagreb en 1948, à l'Index librorum prohibitorum en meme temps qu'il etait excommunié--166.32.193.81 (talk) 20:03, 17 October 2009 (UTC)
- It is common knowledge that the Index was last updated in 1948. Its entire content is accessible online (for example, here) and there is no mention of Novak in there. In fact there is no piece of evidence coming from the allegedly banning authority (Catholic Church) that they ever banned the book. The only ones claiming so were Narodni list (in 1948), Novak himself (in the 1960 edition) and Rivelli (in 1998, for whom we have no idea where he got that information from). Until someone actually finds a source confirming that the book was banned by the Vatican from 1948 to 1966 (when the Index was abolished), I will delete this claim. Timbouctou (talk) 19:56, 4 February 2015 (UTC)
- Delete only if providing a credible reference supporting the claim that this book was not on the Index. The Index was updated i.e. its content was changed which means that some entries were removed. The online index is apparently incomplete. For example, Malaparte's La Pelle was prohibited by Roman Catholic Church and was on the Index, which is not visible on this online list. Moreover, on that list are not even Bacon, Galileo, Descartes, Milton, Pascal, Locke, Voltaire, Hume, Russeau, Flaubert, Zola, Sartre who were prohibited by RCC as per How to Be an Existentialist: or How to Get Real, Get a Grip and Stop Making Excuses (Google eBook) by Gary Cox, A&C Black, Jun 1, 2010 page 116--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 12:47, 5 February 2015 (UTC)
- A "credible source" is what I linked above. It lists the entire 1948 edition of the Index (which is the only version that could have theoretically included Novak). Galileo, Flaubert and the like may have been censored previously but have been removed from the list by 1948. Unless you can produce an actual Catholic Church source listing Novak's book as prohibited (or censored or whatever), this is just unverified hearsay from second and third hand sources. Equally dubious is the claim that Novak had been a Catholic priest at any point in his life - the 1986 edition is available online and neither the publisher's introduction, Blazevic's foreword nor Horvat himself mention anywhere that Horvat had ever actually been a priest. The 1950 review by Neumann (which you and Milos insist on copying word-for-word) seems to be full of factual errors. Timbouctou (talk) 13:23, 5 February 2015 (UTC)
- Counter references by references, if you have any, not by your opinion.--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 17:11, 5 February 2015 (UTC)
- It does not work that way. Oskar Neumann could have just as well written that Catholics are really shape-shifting lizards back in 1950. But that does not mean we should take it for granted. On the other hand, every single book ever included in the Index is well documented as we have access to all editions of the Index. And Novak is not present in any of them. So Neumann obviously had no clue what he was talking about. Timbouctou (talk) 14:41, 6 February 2015 (UTC)
- Please, stop writing nonsense. The "Index" is apparently a fragment of the real Index, therefore a false reference per se.--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 15:17, 6 February 2015 (UTC)
- Where does it say it is "a fragment" exactly? Does it even matter? Is there any list published anywhere by anyone at any time which includes Magnum Crimen in it? Or do you think that having a secret list of prohibited books contributes to their prohibition in public usage? Lol. Timbouctou (talk) 15:53, 6 February 2015 (UTC)
- Please, stop writing nonsense. The "Index" is apparently a fragment of the real Index, therefore a false reference per se.--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 15:17, 6 February 2015 (UTC)
- It does not work that way. Oskar Neumann could have just as well written that Catholics are really shape-shifting lizards back in 1950. But that does not mean we should take it for granted. On the other hand, every single book ever included in the Index is well documented as we have access to all editions of the Index. And Novak is not present in any of them. So Neumann obviously had no clue what he was talking about. Timbouctou (talk) 14:41, 6 February 2015 (UTC)
- Counter references by references, if you have any, not by your opinion.--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 17:11, 5 February 2015 (UTC)
- A "credible source" is what I linked above. It lists the entire 1948 edition of the Index (which is the only version that could have theoretically included Novak). Galileo, Flaubert and the like may have been censored previously but have been removed from the list by 1948. Unless you can produce an actual Catholic Church source listing Novak's book as prohibited (or censored or whatever), this is just unverified hearsay from second and third hand sources. Equally dubious is the claim that Novak had been a Catholic priest at any point in his life - the 1986 edition is available online and neither the publisher's introduction, Blazevic's foreword nor Horvat himself mention anywhere that Horvat had ever actually been a priest. The 1950 review by Neumann (which you and Milos insist on copying word-for-word) seems to be full of factual errors. Timbouctou (talk) 13:23, 5 February 2015 (UTC)
- Delete only if providing a credible reference supporting the claim that this book was not on the Index. The Index was updated i.e. its content was changed which means that some entries were removed. The online index is apparently incomplete. For example, Malaparte's La Pelle was prohibited by Roman Catholic Church and was on the Index, which is not visible on this online list. Moreover, on that list are not even Bacon, Galileo, Descartes, Milton, Pascal, Locke, Voltaire, Hume, Russeau, Flaubert, Zola, Sartre who were prohibited by RCC as per How to Be an Existentialist: or How to Get Real, Get a Grip and Stop Making Excuses (Google eBook) by Gary Cox, A&C Black, Jun 1, 2010 page 116--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 12:47, 5 February 2015 (UTC)
- It is common knowledge that the Index was last updated in 1948. Its entire content is accessible online (for example, here) and there is no mention of Novak in there. In fact there is no piece of evidence coming from the allegedly banning authority (Catholic Church) that they ever banned the book. The only ones claiming so were Narodni list (in 1948), Novak himself (in the 1960 edition) and Rivelli (in 1998, for whom we have no idea where he got that information from). Until someone actually finds a source confirming that the book was banned by the Vatican from 1948 to 1966 (when the Index was abolished), I will delete this claim. Timbouctou (talk) 19:56, 4 February 2015 (UTC)
Alphascript Publishing reference
I've removed the following VDM Publishing reference:
- The latest, and the most comprehensive (80 pages long) survey of this book, is the one edited by Miller, Vandome and McBrewster: Magnum Crimen by Frederic P. Miller (Editor), Agnes F. Vandome (Editor), John McBrewster (Editor) Alphascript Publishing, London (March 5, 2010) ISBN-10: 6130717385, ISBN-13: 978-6130717384. Playmobilonhishorse (talk) 23:23, 21 July 2010 (UTC)
Alleged racist attitude of clergy?
Here is an excerpt (page 990)
Page 990
Nadbisku Stepinac svake godine o Novoj godini predvodi svoje svećenstvo Paveliću i pozdravlja Pavelića sa željama da Pavelić uspije i do kraja izvrši "konsolidaciju" NDH moli za dug život Pavelića i njegove uspjehe a tako isto i na njegov imendan 13 VI i na rođendan 14 VII. Sam najsvečanije celebrira in pontifikalibus o godišnjici NDH i dopušta da se u katedrali najsvečanije izvode zadušnice za najvećeg ustaškog krvnika komandanta "Crne legije" Juru Francetića.
There is far more about the clergy and their involvement in monstruous crimes committed during the WWII--Remind me never (talk) 01:54, 24 October 2010 (UTC)
Online and downloadable this book pdf copy
Please, add it to the article sources. --71.178.103.23 (talk) 01:05, 2 March 2011 (UTC)
Magnum Crimen
Please, has anyone ever translated this book (or a summary or excerpts of it) in English, or French or any other language? If you have any information about this (or about such a project) please contact me:
jdebetz@gmail.com
Thank you.
Jean P.W.
English language translation of the book Magnum Crimen is available here (talkwww.magnumcrimen.org www.magnumcrimen.org.
Please, add it to the article sources.
Locked
Why this article is locked for years?--Milos zankov (talk) 01:25, 15 December 2014 (UTC)
- Because vandals and POV warriors circle here on a regular basis? Peacemaker67 (crack... thump) 01:45, 15 December 2014 (UTC)
Reception unbalanced?
It is nowhere explained which way this book reception is unbalanced. I'd be glad to add more information if I see which way is the book reception unbalanced.--Milos zankov (talk) 15:16, 26 December 2014 (UTC)
- Hello Milos - actually, if you look at the prior version of the article, you'll see a comment pointing to Talk:Magnum Crimen/Comments. The explanation is there. I'd say that the problem with balance is still present. GregorB (talk) 23:00, 3 January 2015 (UTC)
- I've read your comment and I couldn't accept Lovrenovic as a scholar. Not all comments are valuable. Any comment is welcome and acceptable if it's substantiated and sourced. In addition, there are direct links to two negative comments John Neubauer and Robin Harris.. Harris' comment is an opinion, which, I don't think shall be inlined
The scale of the atrocities which now occurred was subsequently greatly exaggerated for political purposes. Viktor Novak, in his slanderous work Magnum Crimen (1948), created out of it a theory of fifty years of Croatian "clero-fascism."
--Milos zankov (talk) 16:50, 4 January 2015 (UTC)
- Well, I did not suggest Lovrenović was a scholar: I quoted his words to illustrate a wider sentiment about the book. Also, I don't think that critical views of the book - if they're as strong and as widely held as in this case - have to come exclusively from scholars to be mentioned in the article.
- The sentence about the "authors who left just short notes about this book" is the crucial problem. Authors who had positive things to say about the book are quoted, but it just so happens that Harris and Neubauer - with their extremely negative assessments - are not, and their views are laconically summarized as merely "short notes about this book". This is precisely the lack of balance I was talking about.
- I'll try to find more of the critical views and list them here. GregorB (talk) 17:17, 4 January 2015 (UTC)
- OK, let me fix 'short notes'--Milos zankov (talk) 17:33, 4 January 2015 (UTC)
- The Croatian Encyclopedia describes the book as "controversial" and notes Novak was actually excommunicated by the CC - maybe that's worth putting in, the intro only mentions an "anathema".
- After a quick scan of online sources I've found this:
- Nothing much on the book in English beyond what is already in the article (but is not fleshed out, as agreed).
- Many Croatian sources seem to mention the book only in passing.
- Negative views come largely from sources associated with the CC - no surprise there.
- I'll be back with more details in a couple of days. GregorB (talk) 18:03, 4 January 2015 (UTC)
- It makes sense to add a Croatian book review to the article, the more substance, the better. About Novak's excommunication, I'd suggest to add this information to his biography.--Milos zankov (talk) 02:13, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
- But it is precisely because of the book he got excommunicated, that's a remarkable fact (even more so than being added to the Index librorum prohibitorum), so it deserves at least a mention. I might add it myself, I'll make a pass or two through the article. I think I'll gather some sources about the reception first - hopefully in a day or two. GregorB (talk) 08:33, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
- I am not against what you wrote above. If you think that his excommunication suits better to his book review than his biography, go ahead that way.--Milos zankov (talk) 12:25, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
- It makes sense to add a Croatian book review to the article, the more substance, the better. About Novak's excommunication, I'd suggest to add this information to his biography.--Milos zankov (talk) 02:13, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
English language edition
I've added this section to the article. The two omitted chapters are online available as the whole book (its earlier edition). Please, leave your comments here.--Milos zankov (talk) 16:28, 28 December 2014 (UTC)
Background
The Background section, added in July 2010 by a blocked socketpuppet of User:Velebit, is identical to the summary published at http://magnumcrimen.org/. The Content section seems to be suffering from the same problem. Timbouctou (talk) 00:39, 6 January 2015 (UTC)
- The sockpuppet text, you are referring to, comes from Oscar Neumann. He says,
- "The name of the author is not completely unknown to students of Latin paleography. Another question is how many of his articles and books on various aspects of Croat national history may have reached either private or public libraries in America. Viktor Novak, a Croat by birth, has been, since 1924, active among the Serbs. He has held the Chair of Croat History which was founded at the University of Belgrade in order to promote mutual understanding between the two kindred peoples."
- in his book review article titled as: Novak, Viktor, Magnum crimen. Pola vijeka klerikalizma u Hrvatskoj (A Half Century of Clericalism in Croatia). Zagreb, 1948. Pp. 1124 in Journal of Central European Affairs - Volume 10 - 1950 Page 63.
- So, your rewording (An ethnic Croat by birth, he has been, since 1924, active as a priest among ethnic Serbs, who are traditionally Orthodox.) of the bold text above is actually rewording of a quote, and makes no sense. Please do not reword the article text if you just do not understand it.
- Your "...edition was financed by a friend of Milorad Ekmečić, a Serbian nationalist historian, ..." is inaccurate (not friend, rather schoolmate), and tagging an historian as a nationalist is POV which has no place here.
- The same text you tagged by and by is unchanged for more than six years. Please, explain on the talk page why the tags are necessary.
- Refrain from rewording the quoted text, too.--Milos zankov(talk) 01:30, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
- An example of unacceptable use of a source, according to WP:Plagiarism, is:
- Inserting a text—copied word-for-word, or with very few changes from a source under copyright—then citing the source in an inline citation after the passage that was copied, without naming the source in the text.
- So, it's not that the original text should not be changed - if it's not an attributed quote ("according to Lutz, Novak was 'blah blah'"), it must be changed, i.e. paraphrased. GregorB (talk) 08:46, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
- Also, you have apparently removed some {{cn}} tags. Note these need not be "explained" (what is there to "explain"?), and should not be removed without providing an inline ref. I'm therefore tempted to revert your edit but let's see what Timbouctou has to say... GregorB (talk) 12:01, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
- An example of unacceptable use of a source, according to WP:Plagiarism, is:
- Yes, you are right about plagiarizm. The source is added. I cannot accept yours "blah, blah". What I did is a usual way of citing authors in scholar works and Misplaced Pages nowhere is against it. Quotes are not necessary. Any rewording of someone's text must preserve the text original meaning, not distort it. There are numerous examples of such way of referencing other works. One mistake on my side, the author is Oscar Neumann which I fixed now. Quoted text cannot be reworded under no circumstances if the text is already quoted.
- About {{cn}}, yes it has to be elaborated. If one man thinks it's necessary, the other might not think so.--Milos zankov (talk) 12:17, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
- To avoid a possible misunderstanding, "blah blah" was meant as a generic placeholder for quoted text, not as a reflection on the content.
- I merely wanted to point out that your criticism of Timbouctou's paraphrasing was not valid. Regarding the choice between quoting and paraphrasing, this is an encyclopedia after all, so the latter is preferable to the former. It is not uncommon to have articles with hundreds of sources, and the text in which every other sentence began with "According to Smith, ..." and "According to Jones, ..." would be quite odd.
- {{Cn}} has to be elaborated? That's news to me. Is there anything to that effect in Template:Citation needed instructions, or anywhere else for that matter?
- I have no time to take a closer look at the article - tomorrow perhaps. GregorB (talk) 12:44, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
- First of all, if calling upon Misplaced Pages guidance, you shall stop ridiculing my posts ("blah, blah", then "That's news to me"). Then, the second time you are falsely referring to Misplaced Pages guidance. From the Template:Citation needed instructions, " (also known by the redirects and ) is a template used to identify claims in articles, particularly if questionable, that need a citation to a reliable source.". Therefore, provide the proof that the marked text is questionable.--Milos zankov (talk) 22:54, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
- As I already said, "blah blah" was meant to be a generic placeholder, not a comment on the text and definitely not ridicule. Sorry if that led to a misunderstanding.
- The "news to me" part may have sounded sarcastic, but that was not my intention at all. I meant it in a quite literal sense: a surprise for me, because I've been editing the English Misplaced Pages for almost 10 years now and I'm completely unaware of a guideline that would require an explanation as a prerequisite for using a {{cn}}. Of course, I could be wrong about this, but nothing in the template's instructions suggest this is so. It's "particularly if questionable", not "only if questionable". The same instruction clearly says that "an editor may add this template to any uncited passage for any reason", the only exception being "common well-known facts" (e.g., "the Moon orbits the Earth"). Note also WP:MINREF criterion #2. I believe this should be abundantly clear. If you disagree with this interpretation, you're free to ask for a second opinion at the Village pump or some other venue. GregorB (talk) 23:18, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
User:Milos zankov
I have reverted wholesale changes reverted to by Milos and would like him to dicuss these changes point by point here. A word of advice - arguing that something had been "in the article for six years" is not really an argument. Also, there is a difference between referencing a fact by supplying its source and directly quoting every single thing verbatim as it appears somewhere. Timbouctou (talk) 14:18, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
- Intentional distortion of the quoted text then deleting reference and changing the referenced text arbitrarily is vandalism. Refusal to justify your changes in the text is refusal to collaborate. All this is against the five pillars of Misplaced Pages.--Milos zankov (talk) 22:46, 7 January 2015 (UTC)
- I'm afraid you are going to be more specific than that in order for your comments to be taken seriously. What do you mean by "intentional distortion of the quoted text"? Examples, please. Also, I believe I have a good grasp of the five pillars you are referring to after spending some 9 years on Misplaced Pages. You have been here less than a month. Simply saying that other editor's contributions are crap and reverting ad nauseam will hardly help your case. Timbouctou (talk) 10:32, 8 January 2015 (UTC)
A reset
May I suggest a reset of the discussion?
We all want to see an improvement to this article. As I already noted, I'm satisfied with the general direction and I think changes are generally a good thing. I really appreciate the willingness and effort that's behind them, even if I disagreed with some of the edits.
Let's discuss our concerns here and refrain from major changes without prior explanation (preferably discussion). That's all there is to it. There is no deadline. I'm sure the article will benefit. GregorB (talk) 12:09, 8 January 2015 (UTC)
Questions related to basic editorial rules, validity of the text changes, and civilty
Unproductive exchange that is going nowhere. Guy (Help!) 18:27, 27 February 2015 (UTC)
- The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
This article was in a stable state for more than six years. Now we are facing with
- Removal of the references here here
- The referenced text altered after removing reference: "Novak was a Croat by birth, and he has been, since 1924, active among the Serbs" turned into "An ethnic Croat by birth, he has been, since 1924, active as a priest among ethnic Serbs, who are traditionally Orthodox."
- Huge number of clarify, fact, and POV without any justification or explanation on the talk page, and refusal to do it, when asked;
- POV and disqualifying: "As reported by the Serbian daily Politika, the publication of the English language edition was financed by a friend of Milorad Ekmečić, a Serbian nationalist historian, who also wrote the foreword to the edition".
- Sidetracking of the issues arised on the talk page, baseless accusations for not following Misplaced Pages rules and ridiculing the opponents in discussion
- Examples: I requested avoiding removal of references and distortions of the quoted text which was countered by ridiculing the request "it's not that the original text should not be changed - if it's not an attributed quote ("according to Lutz, Novak was 'blah blah'"), it must be changed" by GregorB then again by the same user "That's news to me". The next incivilty was addressing me, not the issue: "User:Milos zankov, I'm afraid you are going to be more specific than that in order for your comments to be taken seriously". even though I was very specific in my written request earlier on the talk page, which user User talk:Timbouctou refused to address and then the most outrageous and false claim came from the same user "Simply saying that other editor's contributions are crap and reverting ad nauseam will hardly help your case."
To verify the quotes seehere and here.
- WorldCat is an academic inter library search engine in use worldwide and Troicki's review of Magnum Crimen is not questionable therefore all valid references.
- Serbian reprint Amid a rise in nationalism in Yugoslavia in the 1980s Magnum Crimen was reprinted in Belgrade in 1986, the same year as the SANU memorandum. Dragoljub Živojinović and Dejan Lučić also released their Varvarstvo u ime Hristovo: prilozi za Magnum Crimen (Barbarity in the Name of Christ: Supplements for Magnum Crimen) in 1988. Magnum Crimen was released with a new foreword by Jakov Blažević, a lifelong communist official and the prosecutor at the trial of Aloysius Stepinac. burdened by political connotations which are un-encyclopaedic per se and of no importance to this book review.
- The addition "According to the same article, the publication of the English translation intentionally coincided with the start of the trial for mutual lawsuits in the Croatia–Serbia genocide case before the International Court of Justice, so that "the world would be informed about Ustashe crimes against Serbs during the Second World War"." is completely fabricated and not verified by reference .
- Logical fallacy: "According to Croatian historian Bogdan Krizman, he was present at a meeting where his father Hinko Krizman (then minister of social politics in the new Croatian communist government), Duško Brkić (then minister of justice) and Viktor Novak agreed to prepare the work for Stepinac's trial. Ultimately, it was published by the state Publishing Institute of Croatia in 1948."
- Stepinac's trial ended in September 1946, this book was finished and published in 1948. Krizman nowhere said it, it's Kristo's who said 'Krizman said'.
- At the end, the described behavior of the users mentioned in this request for comment and damaging text changes shall be stopped.--Milos zankov (talk) 18:28, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
Comments
- Serbian reprint Amid a rise in nationalism in Yugoslavia in the 1980s Magnum Crimen was reprinted in Belgrade in 1986, the same year as the SANU memorandum. Dragoljub Živojinović and Dejan Lučić also released their Varvarstvo u ime Hristovo: prilozi za Magnum Crimen (Barbarity in the Name of Christ: Supplements for Magnum Crimen) in 1988. Magnum Crimen was released with a new foreword by Jakov Blažević, a lifelong communist official and the prosecutor at the trial of Aloysius Stepinac. burdened by political connotations which are un-encyclopaedic per se and of no importance to this book review.
- I don't see how separating a clearly political book from its political context is even possible in an encyclopedic article about the book, so I would tend to disagree. It is common knowledge that there was a "rise in nationalism" in the 1980s in Yugoslavia, and "lifelong communist official" is merely a pretty neutral factoid that helps explain who Blažević was. Also, please acquaint yourself with the way discussions are led on Misplaced Pages. Adding your comments inside your previous comments makes the entire thread difficult to follow. Timbouctou (talk) 23:36, 12 January 2015 (UTC)
- Edit-warring will hardly get you anywhere and I refuse to discuss this wholesale. List your concerns point by point if you want to engage in a fruitful discussion. Thanks. Timbouctou (talk) 19:10, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
- Oh and btw this is not a "reference". It is somebody's translation of the primary source, published on somebody's blog. Please discuss changes you want to see introduced here before altering the article. If you are able to provide reasonable arguments for your edits we will not have a problem. If you don't, we will. Thanks. Timbouctou (talk) 19:13, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
- The RFC displays a serious violation of WP:AGF. I'm not interested in further involvement with the article under these circumstances. I'm therefore removing it from my watchlist, but I'll be still available for comments. GregorB (talk) 15:15, 11 January 2015 (UTC)
- I have concerns about the attitude apparent in this RFC. The edits complained about seems to me quite reasonable. The requestor appears to have assumed ownership of this article and seems unwilling to assume good faith. Statements like "...and shall be stopped." are not helpful and indicate a readiness to "edit war". Please remember that Misplaced Pages is a collaborative project and wikipedians need to have a thick skin. Complaints about incivility are based on very scanty evidence. Additionally, I agree with the removal of references that originate from a foreign language blog. Jschnur (talk) 23:13, 18 January 2015 (UTC)
- @Jschnur Never had an idea that I own the article. The Good Faith must be demonstrated not required after bad words about me. Solicited comment for seeing just one side?--Milos zankov (talk) 02:45, 25 January 2015 (UTC)
- I was randomly selected to comment on this RFC. See my talk page. Your inability to assume good faith is telling. Jschnur (talk) 00:15, 27 January 2015 (UTC)
- User Jschnur: Your comment should be impartial and honest. At least, you should notice that this RfC was vandalized by Timbouctou several times, his bad words about scholars, other user, the book are not a proof of good faith, soliciting publicly support from his compatriot administrator, etc. See more below.--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 12:44, 3 February 2015 (UTC)
- RfC The article change history shows that the copyright violation is on the .org side which copied most of the Misplaced Pages article. Removal of the valid and already used reference, then tagging a paragraph with POV makes no sense which Timbouctou did. Rewording a quoted text is a bad practice, assumption of the article ownership is on the Timbouctou side. I do not read Serbo-Croatian, therefore abstaining from a detailed comment about the content and I'll fix which I see wrong. In addition, I agree with the RfC request saying that numerous clarification-needed and citation-needed shall be discussed and justified--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 12:44, 3 February 2015 (UTC)
- FYI we don't know if the "quoted text" is indeed quoted, as it is not represented as a quote at either magnumcrimen.org, nor was it referenced when it was originally added in July 2010 by a blocked socketpuppet. The only idea that any of the text is "quoted" comes from Milos Zankov, a single purpose account who showed up some four years later and who had nothing to do with adding the "quote" in the first place. Also, the "quoted text" is way too long to be considered a quote, and even if we had a reference and page number for it - we still wouldn't be able to use it because of plagiarism. But even if all that is deemed irrelevant - the fact remains that the majority of the article which Milos Zankov wants to see unchanged and included in the article WAS COPIED VERBATIM from a WEBSITE WHICH SAYS IT HOLDS COPYRIGHT TO ITS ENTIRE CONTENT, AS STATED ON THE SAID WEBSITE IN PLAIN VIEW. Timbouctou (talk) 16:50, 3 February 2015 (UTC)
- Timbouctou: Please, do not shout. Here is the proof that you are talking nonsense: https://www.google.com/search?q=Viktor+Novak%2C+a+Croat+by+birth%2C+has+been%2C+since+1924%2C+active+among+the+Serbs.+He+has+held+the+Chair+of+Croat+History+which+was+founded+at+the+University+of+Belgrade+in+order+to+promote+mutual+understanding+between+the+two+kindred+peoples.&btnG=Search+Books&tbm=bks&tbo=1&gws_rd=ssl . This link show you that the quoted text came from a reference dated back to 1950, way before the internet era, not from the .org.--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 19:33, 3 February 2015 (UTC)
- Also read the Magnum Crimen footnote: Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Misplaced Pages® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization. Therefore the Magnum Crimen article is copyrighted way before the .org article!--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 19:39, 3 February 2015 (UTC)
- So entire paragraphs originally published in a 1950 book review in a journal (written by someone called O. Neumann about whom we know nothing about and presumably copyrighted) were copied verbatim (non-attributed to any source and unreferenced) to Misplaced Pages in 2010 (which publishes its articles under creative commons), and then copied (unattributed) again to magnumcrimen.org in 2015 (which claims copyright over its entire content). And then User:Milos zankov (and you yourself) edit-war on the article in order to have the 1950 text restored verbatim - but attributed to the primary work itself, (more specifically "Magnum Crimen , pages I-XV" - which even you yourself say is not really the source of the paragraph given. Sorry but this is a blatant case of WP:PLAGIARISM. Which makes it even worse, as the entire paragraph needs to be deleted or paraphrased, including the vague descriptions such as "active among the Serbs" and the like. Using your circular logic anything copied to Misplaced Pages can become public domain by virtue of it being copied to Misplaced Pages. This is even more absurd since you and Zankov seem to prefer citing a book review for biography facts about the book's author, who was pretty well known, who was a member of the academy of science and whose biography must be available in a million other places. Timbouctou (talk) 19:50, 3 February 2015 (UTC)
- FYI we don't know if the "quoted text" is indeed quoted, as it is not represented as a quote at either magnumcrimen.org, nor was it referenced when it was originally added in July 2010 by a blocked socketpuppet. The only idea that any of the text is "quoted" comes from Milos Zankov, a single purpose account who showed up some four years later and who had nothing to do with adding the "quote" in the first place. Also, the "quoted text" is way too long to be considered a quote, and even if we had a reference and page number for it - we still wouldn't be able to use it because of plagiarism. But even if all that is deemed irrelevant - the fact remains that the majority of the article which Milos Zankov wants to see unchanged and included in the article WAS COPIED VERBATIM from a WEBSITE WHICH SAYS IT HOLDS COPYRIGHT TO ITS ENTIRE CONTENT, AS STATED ON THE SAID WEBSITE IN PLAIN VIEW. Timbouctou (talk) 16:50, 3 February 2015 (UTC)
- @Timbouctou Please, refrain further from your old rant. There is no plagiarism because the whole paragraph you deleted is properly sourced now. You have to learn what is the plagiarism and when to use this word. A text written in 2015 (magnumcrimen.org) cannot be copied in 2010 (into ) because the time is not running backward.--Milos zankov (talk) 23:26, 3 February 2015 (UTC)
- Read my comment a few more times and perhaps you may begin to grasp why your response makes absolutely no sense. Thanks. Timbouctou (talk) 00:01, 4 February 2015 (UTC)
- The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Inappropriate text
I've removed this addition
"The second part of Novak's trilogy Josip Juraj Strossmayer: apostol Jugoslovenske misli was published in 1941 by the state-sponsored Sokol Federation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, a unitarist organization founded in 1929. Its reprint in Belgrade in 1987 was retitled as Magnum Sacerdos"
It is already visible who was publisher, for this reference is given. The phrases "state-sponsored" and "unitarist" have political connotation therefore they are just a personal opinion.--Milos zankov (talk) 22:21, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
- These hardly qualify as "personal opinion" if these facts are widely known and not disputed, per WP:BLUE, and one can argue pretty convincingly that these are relevant for providing a context for readers. I mean, this article is undoubtedly about a book that has some sort of a political agenda. Not saying who published it, where and when, would be misleading. Timbouctou (talk) 23:09, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
- WP:BLUE:This essay contains the advice or opinions of one or more Misplaced Pages contributors. Essays are not Misplaced Pages policies or guidelines.
- Also, the same essay WP:BLUE says
Over-tagging
Misplaced Pages has several templates for tagging material that need verification: inline templates for particular lines, section templates, and article templates. See Misplaced Pages:Template messages. Sometimes editors will go through an article and add dozens of the inline tags, along with several section and article tags, making the article essentially unreadable.
then
Over-citing
Further information: Misplaced Pages:Citation overkill
Citations should be evaluated on the qualities they bring to the article, not on the quantity of citations available. The first 1 or 2 citations supporting a given point are informative; extra citations after that begin to be argumentative. Keep in mind that the purpose of a citation is to guide the reader to external sources where the reader can verify the idea presented, not to prove to other editors the strength of the idea.
Bottom line: Make difference between opinions and facts and better read and understand what you're suggesting for reading to others.--Milos zankov (talk) 17:34, 11 January 2015 (UTC)
Serbian reprint and First edition
Amid a rise in nationalism in Yugoslavia in the 1980s Magnum Crimen was reprinted in Belgrade in 1986, the same year as the SANU memorandum. Dragoljub Živojinović and Dejan Lučić also released their Varvarstvo u ime Hristovo: prilozi za Magnum Crimen (Barbarity in the Name of Christ: Supplements for Magnum Crimen) in 1988. Magnum Crimen was released with a new foreword by Jakov Blažević, a lifelong communist official and the prosecutor at the trial of Aloysius Stepinac.
All above has a marginal meaning and it is written in a political tone with negative hints about someones bad intentions tied to this book. I removed the whole section as per WP:UNDUE and WP:NPOV.
Further,
According to historians Sabrina P. Ramet and Ljubiša S. Adamović, the work originated as preparation for the trial of Aloysius Stepinac in 1946. According to Croatian historian Bogdan Krizman, he was present at a meeting where his father Hinko Krizman (then minister of social politics in the new Croatian communist government), Duško Brkić (then minister of justice) and Viktor Novak agreed to prepare the work for Stepinac's trial. Ultimately, it was published by the state Publishing Institute of Croatia in 1948.
is a tell-tale which I removed from the First edition . --Michelle Ridomi (talk) 20:08, 5 February 2015 (UTC)
- I assume only you and your alter ego agree with that proposal, so I guess you don't have consensus for that. The paragraphs above are valuable for the book publication's context. Again - Magnum Crimen is a political book, envisioned to promote a political goal, published exactly at moments when it was supposed to have political impact. Ignoring it all is hardly helpful. Timbouctou (talk) 21:36, 5 February 2015 (UTC)
- I told you, don't call upon your opinion. You are violating WP:NPOV repeatedly. Avoid further any incivilty ("your alter ego")!--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 15:20, 6 February 2015 (UTC)
- Edits need consensus and consensus consists of opinions. You don't own this article, and neither does your sock/meat puppet Milos. Sorry. Perhaps you could write about this topic on your blog instead? Timbouctou (talk) 15:50, 6 February 2015 (UTC)
- I told you, don't call upon your opinion. You are violating WP:NPOV repeatedly. Avoid further any incivilty ("your alter ego")!--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 15:20, 6 February 2015 (UTC)
- @Michelle Ridomi I fully support your changes you have made. We see that Novak started writing Magnum Crimen in the autumn of 1941 and finished it in 1948. Apparently this book cannot be seen as a preparation work for the Stepinac trial which ended in 1946.--Milos zankov (talk) 17:48, 7 February 2015 (UTC)
- As a support to Michelle's removal of the work originated as preparation for the trial of Aloysius Stepinac I offer the quote I found in the Broszat-Hory book, Als wichtigste Veröffentlichungen dieser Gattung sind zu nennen: Sudjenje Lisaku, Stepincu, Šaliću i družini ustaško-križarskim zločincima i njihovim pomagačima (Der Prozeß gegen die Verbrecher des Ustascha-Kreuzzuges, Lisak, Stepinac, Šalić und ihre Helfershelfer ) Zagreb 1946. Ferner; Viktor Novak: Magnum Crimen. Pola vijeka klerikalizma u Hrvatskoj (Das große Verbrechen. Ein Jahrhundert Klerikalismus in Kroatien) - Zagreb 1948. Werk (1119 S.) behandelt in seinem zweiten Teil die Zeit des Pavelic-Regimes. Es stützt sich dabei vornehmlich auf Dokumente aus den jugoslawischen Archiven der "Landescommissionen zur Erforschung der Verbrechen der Besatzungsmaechte und ihrer Helfershelfer" sowie die Ustascha und die kirchlich-katolische Presse in Kroatien.--Milos zankov (talk) 20:17, 7 February 2015 (UTC)
- Milos zankov: I used google translate to understand the quoted text above. It's quite logical what Hory/Broszat wrote. --Michelle Ridomi (talk) 12:39, 9 February 2015 (UTC)
Primary source vs secondary and tertiary references
I added some secondary sources and now we have 14 secondary sources out of 36. I think that we can remove now the tag requesting additional secondary and tertiary sources.--Milos zankov (talk) 20:03, 7 February 2015 (UTC)
- The majority of inline citations still refer to the primary material. That is not acceptable and should be improved. Timbouctou (talk) 10:48, 9 February 2015 (UTC)
- Milos zankov: I see you added a number of references. We cannot expect that all references based on the book itself shall be replaced by secondary aand tertiary sources. This is the book review and we are supposed to read this book. I'm reading the English translation of this book. Go ahead and remove the tag if you want.--Michelle Ridomi (talk) 12:36, 9 February 2015 (UTC)
- Why can't we expect that? An article about the book is supposed to have information coming from people who we assume are experts and what they said about the book. Timbouctou (talk) 12:40, 9 February 2015 (UTC)
- Let me just comment on using the book as a primary source: I believe it should be OK to use the book itself to support straightforward, non-interpretative claims about its content. (I have not verified, though, that this is indeed the case here.) GregorB (talk) 11:31, 25 September 2016 (UTC)
How long will User:timbouctou be allowed to vandalise this aricle?
Just curious, because his/her behaviour is hideous and the fact it is tolerated here makes Misplaced Pages as flippant about promulgation of extreme right-wing Croatian Ustashi ideology as the so-called "Croatian Misplaced Pages" (to wit: Misplaced Pages in that language) has been when it caused a stir all the way to Croatia's government and Misplaced Pages founders getting involved. This is happenning again, only now on Misplaced Pages in English where the likes of User:timbouctou are removing everything that remotely informs on, let alone problematises, the facts of Croatian extreme right wing and Roman Catholic church in Croatia's atrocities. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.245.135.87 (talk) 03:10, 11 February 2015 (UTC)
VATICAN'S HANDS OVER THIS ARTICLE?
It is not possible to undertand what is MAGNUM CRIMEN! Too many details without importance are given but there is no simple explanation what it is all about? I suppose that Vaticans' paid agents have written some of parts that hide the truth and understanding and I suppose that it all about their crimes in Croatia over Serbs. The Jeruslaem Post has written in an article "Mass Grave of History: Vatican's WWII Identity crises" about priests who took part in competitons "who can split more Serbian throats in a night" . "On August 29, 1942, a friar from the monastery of Siroki Brijeg, named Petar Brzica, won first place for killing the most Serbs in the shortest time, boasting 1,350 throats slit in one night." write JP! — Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.227.244.217 (talk) 10:29, 14 September 2015 (UTC)
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