Talk:Serbs of Croatia: Difference between revisions
FkpCascais (talk | contribs) m Reverted edits by 89.164.239.139 (talk) to last version by FkpCascais |
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::No, you stop edit warring. Who are you to say I am "misreading" it...I say you are misreading it. It is a primary source stating nothing...I repeat NOTHING about "constitutionality" of Serbs in Croatia. It says clearly that Croatia was and is a "national state of Croatian people". Your "arguments" are invalid, you have not addressed a single issue except contant personal remarks...and now even Dr.Jareb (the same source you misuse to strengthen that forgery) is "right-wing nationalist". I would remind you that labeling people and outright ignoring the discussion by calling other people insane, fascist or claiming that you are "a lawyer" or that others "misread" the sources are not valid arguments and go against Wikipedia policy. The tag will stay until you discuss this issue properly. [[User:Shokatz|Shokatz]] ([[User talk:Shokatz|talk]]) 16:06, 20 August 2015 (UTC) |
::No, you stop edit warring. Who are you to say I am "misreading" it...I say you are misreading it. It is a primary source stating nothing...I repeat NOTHING about "constitutionality" of Serbs in Croatia. It says clearly that Croatia was and is a "national state of Croatian people". Your "arguments" are invalid, you have not addressed a single issue except contant personal remarks...and now even Dr.Jareb (the same source you misuse to strengthen that forgery) is "right-wing nationalist". I would remind you that labeling people and outright ignoring the discussion by calling other people insane, fascist or claiming that you are "a lawyer" or that others "misread" the sources are not valid arguments and go against Wikipedia policy. The tag will stay until you discuss this issue properly. [[User:Shokatz|Shokatz]] ([[User talk:Shokatz|talk]]) 16:06, 20 August 2015 (UTC) |
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Hello. I took some time and actually read all of this. I'm somewhat familiar with the topic so i think i can contribute. I would like for us to solve some initial misunderstandings about the issue. The big question is the meaning of the phrase "constitutive", so can we first establish a shared definition of the term? [[User:Shokatz|Shokatz]], [[User:FkpCascais|FkpCascais]] ,[[User:Tuvixer|Tuvixer]], [[Special:Contributions/109.121.37.112|109.121.37.112]]. The definition of the term constitute is the following "to establish (laws, an institution, etc.).". So do we all agree that a constitutive nation is the one who established SRC? If we all agree upon that the we can see in the constitution about who established SRC. [[Special:Contributions/141.138.50.1|141.138.50.1]] ([[User talk:141.138.50.1|talk]]) 22:58, 21 August 2015 (UTC) |
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:I believe I have already touched that issue and quoted a direct passage from the 1947 constitution which in Article 2 says next: |
:I believe I have already touched that issue and quoted a direct passage from the 1947 constitution which in Article 2 says next: |
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:"Ostvarujuci u svojoj oslobodilackoj borbi u bratskom jedinstvu sa Srbima u Hrvatskoj, i u zajednickoj borbi svih naroda Jugoslavije svoju narodnu drzavu - Narodnu Republiku Hrvatsku, hrvatski se narod, izrazavajuci svoju slobodnu volju, a na temelju prava na samoodredjenje - ukljucujuci pravo odcjepljenje i ujedinjenje s drugim narodima - ujedinio na temelju nacela ravnopravnosti s ostalim narodima Jugoslavije i njihovim narodnim republikama: NR Srbijom, NR Slovenijom, NR BiH, NR Makedonijom i NR Crnom Gorom u zajednicku, saveznu drzavu - FNR Jugoslaviju." (eng. " Realizing in their liberation struggle in fraternal unity with the Serbs in Croatia, and in the common struggle of all peoples of Yugoslavia their national state - the People's Republic of Croatia, the Croatian people, expressing their free will, based on the right to self-determination - including the right to secession and unification with other nations - united on the basis of the principle of equality with other peoples of Yugoslavia and their people's republics: PR Serbia, PR Slovenia, PR Bosnia and Herzegovina, PR Macedonia and PR Montenegro in common, federal state - FNR Yugoslavia. ") |
:"Ostvarujuci u svojoj oslobodilackoj borbi u bratskom jedinstvu sa Srbima u Hrvatskoj, i u zajednickoj borbi svih naroda Jugoslavije svoju narodnu drzavu - Narodnu Republiku Hrvatsku, hrvatski se narod, izrazavajuci svoju slobodnu volju, a na temelju prava na samoodredjenje - ukljucujuci pravo odcjepljenje i ujedinjenje s drugim narodima - ujedinio na temelju nacela ravnopravnosti s ostalim narodima Jugoslavije i njihovim narodnim republikama: NR Srbijom, NR Slovenijom, NR BiH, NR Makedonijom i NR Crnom Gorom u zajednicku, saveznu drzavu - FNR Jugoslaviju." (eng. " Realizing in their liberation struggle in fraternal unity with the Serbs in Croatia, and in the common struggle of all peoples of Yugoslavia their national state - the People's Republic of Croatia, the Croatian people, expressing their free will, based on the right to self-determination - including the right to secession and unification with other nations - united on the basis of the principle of equality with other peoples of Yugoslavia and their people's republics: PR Serbia, PR Slovenia, PR Bosnia and Herzegovina, PR Macedonia and PR Montenegro in common, federal state - FNR Yugoslavia. ") |
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:It clearly says that it is the Croatian people who expressed it's free will [realizing its national state – PR Croatia] united with other people's and their national republics. It couldn't be more clear. This is even more clear if you can understand Croatian (or Serbo-Croatian or however you want to call it) which in the word „united“ uses singular form „ujedinio“ and refers specifically to Croatian people as the culprit. The same article is present in the 1974 constitution as well. [[User:Shokatz|Shokatz]] ([[User talk:Shokatz|talk]]) 05:35, 22 August 2015 (UTC) |
:It clearly says that it is the Croatian people who expressed it's free will [realizing its national state – PR Croatia] united with other people's and their national republics. It couldn't be more clear. This is even more clear if you can understand Croatian (or Serbo-Croatian or however you want to call it) which in the word „united“ uses singular form „ujedinio“ and refers specifically to Croatian people as the culprit. The same article is present in the 1974 constitution as well. [[User:Shokatz|Shokatz]] ([[User talk:Shokatz|talk]]) 05:35, 22 August 2015 (UTC) |
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::Yes, this this passage is defining Croatian nation and only Croatian nation as the one who constituted SRC. So where's the problem? Could you post a link to this constitution and the constitution of 1974? I think the 1974 constitution has similar sentence on its beginning. Well usually we wouldn't need to look the previous constitutions to the 1974 constitution, since that was the valid constitution at that time, but for the question of "constituting" a state we can look the past constitutions up to where a state is constituted, since that can not change in the newer versions of the constitution which is evolving. [[Special:Contributions/141.136.206.141|141.136.206.141]] ([[User talk:141.136.206.141|talk]]) 10:08, 22 August 2015 (UTC) |
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:::The problem is that users like Tuvixer and FkpCascais simply refuse these sources and not only that...they refuse the discussion here. And yes the same passage is found in the 1974 constitution as well but the 1974 constitution also included a new passage, more direct and definitive stating that Croatia is a "national state of Croatian people". I've also quoted the entire passage from Dr. Jareb's book "Croatian National Symbols" where he discusses this issue in detail...explaining what the term "narod" and "narodnost" would mean in those constitution and ultimately what the "constituitive nation" would mean. The links for 1947 and 1974 constitutions were posted as well...but here they are again: [https://www.pravo.unizg.hr/_download/repository/Ustav_NRH_1947.pdf 1947] [https://www.pravo.unizg.hr/_download/repository/Ustav_Socijalisticke_RH_1974.pdf 1974] [[User:Shokatz|Shokatz]] ([[User talk:Shokatz|talk]]) 22:22, 22 August 2015 (UTC) |
:::The problem is that users like Tuvixer and FkpCascais simply refuse these sources and not only that...they refuse the discussion here. And yes the same passage is found in the 1974 constitution as well but the 1974 constitution also included a new passage, more direct and definitive stating that Croatia is a "national state of Croatian people". I've also quoted the entire passage from Dr. Jareb's book "Croatian National Symbols" where he discusses this issue in detail...explaining what the term "narod" and "narodnost" would mean in those constitution and ultimately what the "constituitive nation" would mean. The links for 1947 and 1974 constitutions were posted as well...but here they are again: [https://www.pravo.unizg.hr/_download/repository/Ustav_NRH_1947.pdf 1947] [https://www.pravo.unizg.hr/_download/repository/Ustav_Socijalisticke_RH_1974.pdf 1974] [[User:Shokatz|Shokatz]] ([[User talk:Shokatz|talk]]) 22:22, 22 August 2015 (UTC) |
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::::Thank you. I would like to hear from [[User:FkpCascais|FkpCascais]] ,[[User:Tuvixer|Tuvixer]], [[Special:Contributions/109.121.37.112|109.121.37.112]] where's the problem? What is their definition of "constitutive" and why they see both Serbs and Croats defined as constitutive. I will ping them once more before i start reverting.I for a fact know that Serbian propaganda is still repeating this lie from the 90', although the very same question was not even put before the Badinter's commission because it was futile. To remind all, the Badinter's commission was constituted to deal with legal questions during the breakup of Yugoslavia. Serbian side had put several questions in front of it, but never the question of Serbian constitutive status in "Croatia". That for me is a clear admission by Serbia that there were no such status. Also a clear indication that there was no such status is international recognition of Croatia by all counties in the world, even Serbia itself. Instead, Serbia had put another question which seemed less futile before the Badinter's commission. The question about succession of nation over republics. The result of this question being favorable to the Serbs would be the same as the previous question, if even not more favorable. The thing is that Serbs did not want Croats in their new Yugoslavia (in another words, Greater Serbia), so they wanted to carve only a portion of Croatia that they had designated to became Serbian territory. With the question they asked the Badinter's commission they would be allowed to do that. With the question of this topic they wouldn't be allowed to carve only a portion of Croatia but only to revert Croatian decision to success. That would mean whole Croatia would be left within Yugoslavia. Of course, that was against the Yugoslav constitution, and that had been confirmed by Badinter's commission. I would like to hear from the people who object the answer to why the question of the supposed Serbian constitutive status was not put before the Badinter's commission. [[Special:Contributions/89.164.239.139|89.164.239.139]] ([[User talk:89.164.239.139|talk]]) 10:44, 23 August 2015 (UTC) |
::::Thank you. I would like to hear from [[User:FkpCascais|FkpCascais]] ,[[User:Tuvixer|Tuvixer]], [[Special:Contributions/109.121.37.112|109.121.37.112]] where's the problem? What is their definition of "constitutive" and why they see both Serbs and Croats defined as constitutive. I will ping them once more before i start reverting.I for a fact know that Serbian propaganda is still repeating this lie from the 90', although the very same question was not even put before the Badinter's commission because it was futile. To remind all, the Badinter's commission was constituted to deal with legal questions during the breakup of Yugoslavia. Serbian side had put several questions in front of it, but never the question of Serbian constitutive status in "Croatia". That for me is a clear admission by Serbia that there were no such status. Also a clear indication that there was no such status is international recognition of Croatia by all counties in the world, even Serbia itself. Instead, Serbia had put another question which seemed less futile before the Badinter's commission. The question about succession of nation over republics. The result of this question being favorable to the Serbs would be the same as the previous question, if even not more favorable. The thing is that Serbs did not want Croats in their new Yugoslavia (in another words, Greater Serbia), so they wanted to carve only a portion of Croatia that they had designated to became Serbian territory. With the question they asked the Badinter's commission they would be allowed to do that. With the question of this topic they wouldn't be allowed to carve only a portion of Croatia but only to revert Croatian decision to success. That would mean whole Croatia would be left within Yugoslavia. Of course, that was against the Yugoslav constitution, and that had been confirmed by Badinter's commission. I would like to hear from the people who object the answer to why the question of the supposed Serbian constitutive status was not put before the Badinter's commission. [[Special:Contributions/89.164.239.139|89.164.239.139]] ([[User talk:89.164.239.139|talk]]) 10:44, 23 August 2015 (UTC) |
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:::::You will not be reverting anything, you are blocked user [[User talk:Michael Cambridge|Michael Cambridge]] editing as IP (see IP 141 contributions). [[User:FkpCascais|FkpCascais]] ([[User talk:FkpCascais|talk]]) 10:59, 23 August 2015 (UTC) |
:::::You will not be reverting anything, you are blocked user [[User talk:Michael Cambridge|Michael Cambridge]] editing as IP (see IP 141 contributions). [[User:FkpCascais|FkpCascais]] ([[User talk:FkpCascais|talk]]) 10:59, 23 August 2015 (UTC) |
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::::::You can make a sock puppet report if you wish, but you can't designate someone as a sock and remove his edits. [[Special:Contributions/89.164.239.139|89.164.239.139]] ([[User talk:89.164.239.139|talk]]) 11:18, 23 August 2015 (UTC) |
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Siniša Mihajlović
Why isnt Siniša Mihajlović in the pictures???? He is currently the most known Serb from Croatia probably... — Preceding unsigned comment added by Правичност (talk • contribs) 19:07, 9 February 2013 (UTC)
Nikola Tesla
Nikola Tesla should be removed from this list. He doesn't have any connection to Croatia. He was born in Military frontier of the Austrian Empire where he lived. That Military frontier had become Croatia in 1881., and that was after Tesla no longer lived there. For further info, see the discussions Here and Here Asdisis (talk) 18:51, 9 July 2014 (UTC)
- Wouldn't agree for making such actions in such a short time, it needs further discussions, and where all the assurance that some editors opinion is more valuable than the academic built over a century, written in National enyclopedias? Saying Tesla had no connection to Croatia, or making it very minimal, can't be accepted without doubts in some suspicious intentions to lose his connection with Croatia and through his national identity bring Tesla closer to Serbia, something was happening and continued to be done from Yugoslavian time, yet he had nothing to do with that country, even by his national identity. Of course, historically speaking the sentence "Nikola Tesla was born on 10 July (O.S. 28 June) 1856 to Serbian parents in the village of Smiljan, Austrian Empire" is true, but avoding mentioning Croatia is more bad than good. Smiljan, Lika, and the Military Frontier, were on the territory of the Croatian Kingdom, and as such Military Frontier politically, geographically, culturally and socially belonged to the Croatian historical sphere. That's why people in that area have identified themselves with Croatia, and why Tesla said "I am equally proud of my Serbian origin and my Croatian fatherland".--Crovata (talk) 19:56, 9 July 2014 (UTC)
- That's why i started this discussion. I references high quality discussions that already reached certain conclusions. Tesla had no connection to Croatia. That was directly established by referenced discussions. I strongly supported the opposite stand, as you can see in the discussions. Military frontier was not on the territory of Croatian Kingdom, but was a separate entity. It became Croatian territory in 1881., a long time after Tesla lived there. If you read the discussions, all that you said I also advocated. The discussion went to ANI. Please read the referenced discussions. For the last 30 days discussions were open, so I wouldn't call this a hasty decision. I'm prepared to discuss another 30 days and go to another ANI if necessary. Also I would like to note that its hard to edit anything regarding Tesla since different articles were transformed to Serbian/Croatian strongholds. Asdisis (talk) 20:16, 9 July 2014 (UTC)
- If you believe in the well being of your intention, then I support whatever the outcome, but also believe there's more important articles and issues to work on, like this one (Serbs of Croatia), for which I don't have enough expertise and sources to edit alone.
- Would note "generalization" on that period of history. Geographically, Smiljan was closer to Velebit, which means quiet within Lika territory than to the Eastern border of the Croatian Military Frontier with Bosnia, and it wasn't called "Croatian" without cause because that was the original territory of Croatian Kingdom since the establishing of the principaliy/kingdom in the 9th or 10th century until the Ottoman invasion. Then it was for a century and half under Ottoman control, and Croatian Kingdom was without Western Bosnia territory and separated in four different areas (from original territory; Dalmatia, Croatian Military Frontier, Croatia, Slavonian Military Frontier). With peace agreements in late 17th and early 18th the current border between Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina was established, while Lika was returned under Austrian control, but wasn't reunited with then small Croatian Kingdom centered around city of Zagreb, but to the Croatian Military Frontier, which as we know, wasn't disestablished until 1881. The Military Frontier was controlled by Austrian administration, but it wasn't political, geographical, cultural and social spehere of Vienna, but of Croatia.
- There's no harm of "(modern-day Croatia)" being included, and if we're simplifying history and reducing Tesla connection with Croatia, actually of Croatia with Croatian Military Frontier, Slavonian Military Frontier, and Dalmatia, because they weren't simply "Croatia" by someone's standard, then as well Zaharije Orfelin (b. 1726, Vukovar, Slavonian Military Frontier), Josip Runjanin (b. 1821, Vinkovci, Slavonian Military Frontier), Patriarch Josif Rajačić (b. 1785, Brinje in Lika, Croatian Military Frontier), Simo Matavulj (b. 1852, Šibenik, Dalmatia), Petar Preradović (b. 1818, Grabovnica, Slavonian Military Frontier), Svetozar Pribićević (b. 1875, Kostajnica, Croatian Military Frontier), Milutin Milanković (b. 1879, Dalj, Slavonian Military Frontier), and many others, can't be considered Serbs of Croatia. Then what you consider "Croatia"? What is the criteria to be considered Serb of Croatia and to be included in the list?
- Then I would advise you, or anyone, to not discuss only the case of Tesla, but of all Serbs of Croatia who were born until 1881.--Crovata (talk) 22:05, 9 July 2014 (UTC)
- That is the outcome of the referenced discussions. I was maybe to harsh with the statement that this discussion will go to ANI. I started this discussion and referenced the other discussion which went to ANI and was resolved. Its conclusion is that Tesla had no connection to Croatia. Someone accused me that I was buldgeoning, so I will stay out of this discussion and leave for other editors to resolve it. I just started the discussion and pointed that the decision of ANI directly contradicts that Tesla had any connection to Croatia. I spent a good portion of the last month investigating sources and proving the opposite. Not a single person agreed with me. Not in the 4 discussions I started, RfC, nor ANI, although I thought I proved my point with numerous sources. Asdisis (talk) 00:17, 10 July 2014 (UTC)
- The problem at Tesla was never about Croatia, but rather about Asdinsis proposals. He basically insisted to add Croatia as Tesla´s birthplace instead of the Military Frontier. Another thing I see being mixed-up here is that Military Frontier was Croatian. It wasn´t... Parts became Croatian. FkpCascais (talk) 02:03, 10 July 2014 (UTC)
- You can't simply say "it wasn't Croatian", of course it wasn't Croatian Kingdom, but Military Frontier is part of Croatian history because it was previously it's territory, and on the re-counquested territory of Croatian Kingdom was established Croatian Military Frontier. In 1881 was returned to Croatia because Croatia had historical right on it. Neverthless, is with the discussion conclusions altered view or criteria to be Nikola Tesla, every other mentioned above, and other born before 1881, still considered and listed as Serbs of Croatia?--Crovata (talk) 11:33, 10 July 2014 (UTC)
- I can't say what would be the qualification for others. The referenced discussion concluded that Tesla was not born in Croatia. That means that anyone born in Military frontier was not born in Croatia. However they may have lived in Croatia and that may mean they could be called the Serbs of Croatia. Asdisis (talk) 13:28, 10 July 2014 (UTC)
- Asdisis, please don't try to disrupt Wikipedia to prove a point. --Joy [shallot] (talk) 11:08, 11 July 2014 (UTC)
- As I said, I won't have anything to do with this discussion. I just started it and left a reference to the decision of RfC and ANI regarding Tesla's birthplace. I do not see the reason not to spread that decision. It is done in good faith. The fact is that Tesla was not born in Croatia, not he lived in Croatia at any point in time. He had no connections to Croatia. The qualification that he was a Serb of Croatia should be reconsidered. Asdisis (talk) 12:45, 11 July 2014 (UTC)
- The decision that you link to is simply orthogonal to this. Those discussions are largely about the phrasing of a sentence that first mentions Croatia in the article. The conclusion that he's somehow completely disconnected from the Serbs of Croatia just because a sentence is phrased in a way that you don't personally like - is plain non sequitur. --Joy [shallot] (talk) 19:34, 11 July 2014 (UTC)
- The decision is that he was not born in Croatia. I think you also advocated that. If he was not born in Croatia, but a completely different entity, how is he then connected to Croatia? Asdisis (talk) 23:43, 11 July 2014 (UTC)
- Yes, he was not born in Croatia, because at time of his birt Smiljan was not part of K. of Croatia. However SMiljan was later incorporated into Croatia. So nowadays we consider Serbs from what is currently Croatia, Serbs of Croatia. What is so hard to understand? FkpCascais (talk) 01:04, 12 July 2014 (UTC)
- I just references the discussions which reached some conclusions. It's for the editors of this page to use them. Just to note that Military frontier was incorporated into Kingdom of Croatia in 1881. That was after Tesla lived there. I doubt that the qualification "Serbs of Croatia" is founded on the grounds you mentioned. However, if it is, I agree with you. I wouldn't want to participate in this discussion. I just referenced some discussions which reached a valuable conclusion. Please do not answer me or engage me in this discussion, since i won't participate or have any influence on the decision to the edit. Best regards.Asdisis (talk) 01:38, 12 July 2014 (UTC)
Inclusion of living people
For the umpteenth time: do not list living people here, implying their ethnicity or ethnic background, without reliable inline references. Note WP:BLP applies, and such entries may be summarily removed from the article. Which I'm going to do in 48 hours. GregorB (talk) 13:39, 5 December 2014 (UTC)
- Okay, removed with this edit. Please feel free to reintroduce people that were removed, but only with a supporting reliable source in an inline ref. GregorB (talk) 10:16, 10 December 2014 (UTC)
I see in the pictures we have two basketball players (Stojaković and Mačvan) and two other sportists (Mihajlović and Šekarić). Having in mind that 3 sportists would be fairly enough, I think two basket players is too much, and no doubts Stojaković is the one world-wide known. Would anyone oppose me changing Mačvan by Momčilo Bajagić? I cant beleave no one mentioned Bajaga before, he is well known musician. FkpCascais (talk) 00:09, 20 April 2015 (UTC)
Preradovic and Pancic
I am surprised these two are on the list. First Preradovic was certainly of Serbian origin however he personally identified as a Croat and completely naturalized. So while I agree he should be mentioned he should not be featured on the infobox...Runjanin would be a much better example. As for Pancic he was the opposite case in relation to Preradovic...he was a Croat born in Croatia but moved to Serbia and naturalized, identifying as a Serb so he has nothing to do with this article in general. I am gonna leave this comment and see if someone is interested in a discussion of some sorts but if none I will proceed and make these changes accordingly. Shokatz (talk) 01:07, 18 June 2015 (UTC)
- Can you provide some sources first, and present them here on the talk page? Tnx --Tuvixer (talk) 12:20, 18 June 2015 (UTC)
- The sources are present on their respective articles. Shokatz (talk) 17:49, 12 July 2015 (UTC)
- I support the removal of both.--Zoupan 21:38, 12 July 2015 (UTC)
- Again, present the sources here. Tnx --Tuvixer (talk) 07:36, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- Preradović is of Serbian origins and there is no dispute. I really don't see what do you want to do? --Tuvixer (talk) 07:38, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- I suggest you read their respective articles, no need to repost something that is already present in those articles. As for Preradovic, yes he was of Serbian origin, however that is something totally different. Pancic for example was of Croatian origin but declared as a Serb. Unless you have a valid argument to keep both of these I will proceed and remove them. Shokatz (talk) 08:43, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- I support the removal of both.--Zoupan 21:38, 12 July 2015 (UTC)
- The sources are present on their respective articles. Shokatz (talk) 17:49, 12 July 2015 (UTC)
- Again, present the sources here. I can't find them in the articles so I am assuming that you are making that up. So you are the one who is deciding who is of Serbian origins or not??? You do not OWN this article, ok?
- In your uneducated opinion, where would you put Pančić and Preradović? Tnx --Tuvixer (talk) 08:52, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Yes, I am making up that Preradovic is clearly noted as a Croatian poet and strictly as a Croatian (of Serbian origin) in his article. I am also making up that in the Life section of the Pancic article there it says he was born in Croatia of Croatian parents and moved to Serbia where he was naturalized as Serbian citizen. What the hell are you talking about? And who said anything about owning the article...besides you now? Let me put this the other way, do you have any sources these two were Serbs? I want to see them. Shokatz (talk) 09:50, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- You want to change the article. It is up to you to prove your point. Again present the sources here. Tnx. Also where would you put Pančić and Preradović? Tnx --Tuvixer (talk) 12:40, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Actually it's not. You want to have something in the article? Prove it belongs there. You cannot have one thing in the main articles (which are Preradovic and Pancic articles respectively) and then group them on a list which contradicts their main articles. Shokatz (talk) 16:01, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- You want to change the article. It is up to you to prove your point. Again present the sources here. Tnx. Also where would you put Pančić and Preradović? Tnx --Tuvixer (talk) 12:40, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Yes, I am making up that Preradovic is clearly noted as a Croatian poet and strictly as a Croatian (of Serbian origin) in his article. I am also making up that in the Life section of the Pancic article there it says he was born in Croatia of Croatian parents and moved to Serbia where he was naturalized as Serbian citizen. What the hell are you talking about? And who said anything about owning the article...besides you now? Let me put this the other way, do you have any sources these two were Serbs? I want to see them. Shokatz (talk) 09:50, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- How does it contradict? --Tuvixer (talk) 16:26, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Sorry I have to ask you this...are you serious or you are just trolling? Shokatz (talk) 20:24, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Please stop dodging the question. --Tuvixer (talk) 21:57, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Read what I wrote already, read the respective aricles and stop trolling or I will report you. Shokatz (talk) 22:01, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Please stop dodging the question. --Tuvixer (talk) 21:57, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Sorry I have to ask you this...are you serious or you are just trolling? Shokatz (talk) 20:24, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
Stop it already. I have replaced Preradović in the infobox with Nikodim Milaš, provisionally. Preradović is not to be removed from the list, nor does the fact that he is of ethnic Serb descent to be removed from his article (obviously), just to clarify. As for Pančić, he was Croatian Bunjevac and naturalized-assimilated Serbian.--Zoupan 23:34, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Why did you remove Preradović from the infobox? --Tuvixer (talk) 07:54, 15 July 2015 (UTC)
- I agree with the changes completely. Shokatz (talk) 15:35, 15 July 2015 (UTC)
- Can someone here make a valid argument or do you all think that you OWN the article. Show some good faith and revert your edits. Tnx --Tuvixer (talk) 17:01, 15 July 2015 (UTC)
- I agree with the changes completely. Shokatz (talk) 15:35, 15 July 2015 (UTC)
I think that the fact that Preradović converted to Catholicism (call it "de facto de-Serbianization"), lived in Austria and was an Austro-Hungarian general and member of the Illyrian movement shows that he had less to do with the heritage of Serbs of Croatia, and thus should not be included in the infobox, where more notable individuals of the community should be included.--Zoupan 17:31, 15 July 2015 (UTC)
Serbs as "constituent nation" in Croatia
I haven't noticed this before but it caught my attention after I was re-reading this article once again. The claim made in the article (War in Croatia section - Amid political changes during the breakup of Yugoslavia and following the Croatian Democratic Union's victory in the 1990 general election, the Croatian Parliament ratified a new constitution in December 1990 which changed the status of Serbs from a constitutional nation to a national minority, listed with other minorities.) that the Serbs were a constituent nation in Croatia during Yugoslavia is not supported by either 1947 constitution of People's Republic of Croatia nor by later revised and expanded constitution of Socialist Republic of Croatia from 1974...I am not counting the 1963 constitution since it was basically identical to the one in 1947. Furthermore, not only that, but it is also in direct contradiction with the next two sentences. So first we have one claim then the next two sentences refuting that very claim. Confusing. Since these type of things (regarding this subject) tend to be "hot topics" I will expand more on this below...before I continue to make minor rewording of that sentence.
The 1947 constitution of PR Croatia in it's 2nd paragraph states: "Ostvarujuci u svojoj oslobodilackoj borbi u bratskom jedinstvu sa Srbima u Hrvatskoj, i u zajednickoj borbi svih naroda Jugoslavije svoju narodnu drzavu - Narodnu Republiku Hrvatsku, hrvatski se narod, izrazavajuci svoju slobodnu volju, a na temelju prava na samoodredjenje - ukljucujuci pravo odcjepljenje i ujedinjenje s drugim narodima - ujedinio na temelju nacela ravnopravnosti s ostalim narodima Jugoslavije i njihovim narodnim republikama: NR Srbijom, NR Slovenijom, NR BiH, NR Makedonijom i NR Crnom Gorom u zajednicku, saveznu drzavu - FNR Jugoslaviju." (eng. "Realizing in it's liberation struggle [and] in the brotherly union with the Serbs in Croatia, and in common struggle of all nations of Yugoslavia[,] its national state - People's Republic of Croatia, the Croatian people, expressing its free will, and on the basis of right to self-determination - including the right to secede and unite with other nations - have united on the principle of equality with other nations of Yugoslavia and their national republics: PR Serbia, PR Slovenia, PR Bosnia and Herzegovina, PR Macedonia and PR Montenegro in common, federal state - FPR Yugoslavia"). I have translated this almost literally so it might not be the most grammatically correct (kinda hard to translate this communist legal mumbo jumbo to English) but you get the picture. The paragraph clearly states that PR Croatia was a "national state of Croatian people" while the Serbs in Croatia only get a specific mention since they were the largest and most important national minority and the constitution obviously followed the general Brotherhood and Unity principle.
The above paragraph was also present in the 1974 constitution in the opening "Basic Principles" section. However it gets even more explicit and detailed in the Chapter I. named "Opce Odredbe" (eng.General Regulations) where it is clearly stated: "Socijalisticka Republika Hrvatska je nacionalna drzava hrvatskog naroda, drzava srpskog naroda u Hrvatskoj i drzava drugih narodnosti koje u njoj žive." (eng. "Socialist Republic of Croatia is a national state of Croatian people, state of Serbian people in Croatia and state of all other nationalities [national minorities in essence] who live within it"). So it explicitly states that SR Croatia is a national state of Croatian people and a state of Serbs in Croatia and all other national minorities who live in it. This constitution was valid all the way until 1990 when the new constitution was introduced (which by the way didn't really change much regarding the defining principles described in 1974 constitution) so the entire premise that the Croatian Serbs were removed or somehow downgraded is not true. So to reitirate - the claim that the Serbs in Croatia were a "constituent nation" before the 1990 constitution is simply not supported by the facts, or rather to be even more direct, is simply not true. The 1990 constitution (which is the same constitution valid to this day) has basically the same sentence with one difference...it no longer mentions only Serbs but instead lists all significant (if not all) "nationalities" i.e. national minorities.
Links: Constitution of NR Croatia Constitution of SR Croatia Shokatz (talk) 02:34, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
Hey, buraz, you can't have it both ways, either it is mumbo-jumbo or it is valid legal documents with valid statements on which you try making your hypothesis sound. The other thing, this mumbo-jumbo of yours that Serbs weren't removed from the 1990 constitution as a constituent nation, is how you put it: "simply not supported by the facts". They were removed from the constitution as a nation with their previous status because of one significant difference. Like you said it yourself: the 1990 constitution "no longer mentions only Serbs". Other nationalities weren't mentioned before as is with the 1990 constitution where Serbs were listed under other "nationalities". Whether they were downgraded from a constituent nation by this or not might be a matter of interpretation, but surely not by some mere buraz. He managed to falsify his logic and prove his anti-Serb bias. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.121.37.112 (talk) 19:56, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
- I don't understand what are you saying but I suggest you re-read everything I wrote including the paragraphs in both constitutions which can be seen in the links I provided. There was no "constituency" of Serbs in Croatia and thus they couldn't be downgraded or anything similar. The fact Croatian Serbs were separately mentioned does not mean they had "constituent" status and to claim so is wrong and non-factual. We can talk about perception perhaps but that again has nothing to do with legal documents and laws which is the issue here. And as for my "mumbo jumbo" reference I was referring to the lingo used within that paragraph which is non-typical of modern legal documents which tend to be very dry and very direct....all of which that paragraph wasn't thus making it hard to translate it into English. Shokatz (talk) 21:50, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
- You buraz, are one some really interesting creature. Biljka, as you might say it. I mean FWIW, if there's no constituency of Serbs why couldn't it be said then the same for the constituency of Croats? Yeah, I mean why not? What defines the constituency? Phrases like "narodna država", "nacionalna država"? What's the difference anyway? I mean, if you're no match for translating this from Serbian/Serbo-Croatian (whatever it is called language) then you're again full of mumbo-jumbo. Or I might as well call it shit. And what's with this communist shitty attributes you're applying to your sources? You some anti-commie, some fascist, what? These texts are the same documents you're trying to squeeze some premises out from. You're really funny, you know? If you wanna be taken serious, than quit bullsh*ing about perception. There's no perception in discerning legal documents. There might be interpretation, but perception: no. And how come you don't understand when I write something to you, and instead of re-reading it once again and trying to understand what is written yourself, you are suggesting it to others? Isn't that hypocrite? I'm mean it's so funny taking someone's word for his expertise when he blows it in his own face the second he speaks. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.121.37.112 (talk) 22:49, August 13, 2015 (UTC)
- This is not a forum (see WP:FORUM)...unless you have something constructive to add I suggest you do so, otherwise I have no interest in chatting with you. This is also English language Wikipedia so use and understand of English language is desirable if not required. If you don't understand it then you shouldn't be here. Shokatz (talk) 23:02, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
- Stop babbling about forum. You started a forum with your interpretations of legal documents. If you're not up to it, then you have no business chatting here. You said it yourself that you didn't understand my post. Then please do us all a favor and start learning: viable command of English language is one essential, acquiring logical reasoning is another. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.121.37.112 (talk) 23:13, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
- So do you have any valid arguments or not? Shokatz (talk) 23:45, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
- So do you have any solid proofs for what you are saying or all is based on your perception? Ahem, sorry, interpretation. You had me confused here - I give you that. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.121.37.112 (talk) 02:44, 14 August 2015 (UTC)
- The proof is 1947 and 1974 constitution. You should now stop trolling. Shokatz (talk) 03:37, 14 August 2015 (UTC)
- You as an encyclopedist should know that we don't deal with original research. If you find reliable secondary sources, then maybe it's possible to talk. This way - no. You should now stop the trolling. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.121.37.112 (talk) 04:44, 14 August 2015 (UTC)
- First, his is not WP:OR as I have valid references. The sentence in question does not as it lacks direct citation and furthermore is in direct contradiction with the next sentence using the same generic reference. Second, I have warned you several times not to remove the tags without proper discussion which you here blatantly refused and continue to disrupt not only this page but the actual would-be proper discussion. I would suggest you stop edit-warring and acting in a disruptive manner as it may end up with you being blocked. Shokatz (talk) 12:32, 14 August 2015 (UTC)
- You as an encyclopedist should know that we don't deal with original research. If you find reliable secondary sources, then maybe it's possible to talk. This way - no. You should now stop the trolling. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.121.37.112 (talk) 04:44, 14 August 2015 (UTC)
- The proof is 1947 and 1974 constitution. You should now stop trolling. Shokatz (talk) 03:37, 14 August 2015 (UTC)
- So do you have any solid proofs for what you are saying or all is based on your perception? Ahem, sorry, interpretation. You had me confused here - I give you that. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.121.37.112 (talk) 02:44, 14 August 2015 (UTC)
- So do you have any valid arguments or not? Shokatz (talk) 23:45, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
- Stop babbling about forum. You started a forum with your interpretations of legal documents. If you're not up to it, then you have no business chatting here. You said it yourself that you didn't understand my post. Then please do us all a favor and start learning: viable command of English language is one essential, acquiring logical reasoning is another. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.121.37.112 (talk) 23:13, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
- Read the Constitution and you will see that the SR Croatia was a stat of the Croatian and Serbian people and as well of all national minorities. Tnx --Tuvixer (talk) 21:45, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
- No it wasn't. You have clear quotations from both 1947 and 1974 constitutions (and the links provided) which clearly and directly state that Croatia is a national state of Croatian people. Shokatz (talk) 21:50, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
- It is funny how you read the first part of that sentence but ignore the rest of the sentence, which is really important. It was a national state of Croatian people, but also of Serbian people in Croatia, and of all national minorities in Croatia. It is all on page 116 of the 1974 Constitution. So please show some good faith and revert your edits to the article, and ask for a 3O. Tnx. --Tuvixer (talk) 22:16, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
- Sure it was and it is still today the state of all it's citizens as well, but it was and still is only a national state of Croatian people. Now we are here talking about the alleged "constituent status" of Serbs in Croatia which the both constitutions refute directly. If that was the case both the 1947 and 1974 consitutions would state that Croatia was a national state of both Croats and Serbs...which it does not. I suggest you start reading with understanding. Unless you have some valid arguments I suggest you refrain from commenting in the future. Shokatz (talk) 22:28, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
- It is funny how you read the first part of that sentence but ignore the rest of the sentence, which is really important. It was a national state of Croatian people, but also of Serbian people in Croatia, and of all national minorities in Croatia. It is all on page 116 of the 1974 Constitution. So please show some good faith and revert your edits to the article, and ask for a 3O. Tnx. --Tuvixer (talk) 22:16, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
I was aware of this discussion but I haven't got much time to take part in it. I share passion for law and I fully agree with Tuvixer in his interpretation. As I see at the first post, Shokatz bolded the part of the constitutional text which refers to Croats, but the case is that right next, Serbs from Croatia were mentioned, and once their mention was removed, it obviously means a change in their status. FkpCascais (talk) 19:28, 19 August 2015 (UTC)
- Show me the part in the constitution where it says Croatia is a "national state of Serbian people". You can't because it wasn't. In this case the term "constituent nation" means that that Croatia was defined as "national state" for certain people. Only Serbia was a "national state of Serbian people", Croatia was a "national state of Croatian people". It's clearly stated and defined as such. How you can read that as anything else is beyond me. And Serbs weren't removed from anything, the 1990s constitution still said the same thing except it changed from "other nationalities" into mentioning each and every one...so in this case we have the absurdity of Tuvixer claiming that mentioning other nations (national minorities) was somehow degrading to Serbs in Croatia. Hilarious. Shokatz (talk) 21:22, 19 August 2015 (UTC)
The status of Serbs certainly changed. Before none of the other current national minorities was mentioned in the constitution, afterwards some other ethnicities/nationalities were also there by their names. One curiosity: the constitution doesn't enlist for example Yugoslavs into national minorities so it isn't true that it mentioned each and every ethnicity/nationality. Anyway, the Serbs were by their name in previous constitutions and without the others' names, in Tuđman's there were others. So it changed at least for that matter. And that is regardless of the fact that the phrase "national state of" does nothing to reserve the constituency only to the nation that it is used for. There are surely other meanings which could be applied to that particular phrasing. I must say that I concur with some of the interlocutors that there may be a bit of excess on how free should someone feel to indiscriminately interpret primary sources on their own. Indeed a kind of original research. And there most certainly isn't anything hilarious with the fact that this issue probably was one of or the sole initiating trigger for the start of war in Yugoslavia. Anyone claiming otherwise is either seriously wrong or has very sinister motives. So laughing about it is minimally tactless if not deadly evil. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.175.64.35 (talk) 23:36, 19 August 2015 (UTC)
- First, "Yugoslavs" weren't recognized as a separate "nation" or "nationality" in Yugoslavia. It was a sort of supra-national identity which came about with time. By constitutions of the federal republics and the Yugoslav federation itself only six "nations" were recognized as "constitutional". Slovenia was a the nation-state for Slovenes, Croatia for Croats, Serbia for Serbs, Montenegro for Montenegrins, Macedonia for Macedonians. The only exception to this rule was Bosnia-Herzegovina which was established as a "drzavna zajednica" (eng. "state union") of several [constitutive] "nations"...namely Muslims (Bosniaks), Serbs and Croats. Second, as I said the very notion that the addition of other minorities by name (instead of grouping them into "others") in the 1990 constitution has somehow degraded Serbs is indeed hilarious and to be more direct simply offensive. What I am talking about here is not WP:OR, it is in fact used in the very reference which right now is misused on the claim that Serbs allegedly had "constituent" status, because the original paragraph said they were changed from "status nation" ("explicitly mentioned minority") to a "constitutional nation" way back in 2011 and was never backed up by any source, discussed or elaborated. Third, this issue was indeed one of the triggers for the Serbian rebellion in the 1990s because they were manipulated into believing they had some "constitutional status" which they did not and the same claim was used (and still is) to justify the rebellion itself. We have several sources on this issue, namely: Dr. Zdenko Radelic in his book "Hrvatska u Jugoslaviji 1945-1990" (eng. Croatia in Yugoslavia 1945-1990) wrote about this issue specifically...Dr. Radelic is a member of Croatian Institute of History. We also have Dr. Mario Jareb (who we use as a reference on the site...the one currently misused) who is also member of the Institute of History and who in his book "Croatian National Symbols" wrote: '"Optužbe o tome da su hrvatske vlasti navodno željele izbaciti Srbe iz Ustava RH prate i optužbe da su usvajanjem amandmana i Ustava RH od 22. prosinca 1990. oni navodno izgubili konstitutivnost u Hrvatskoj. Kronologija događaja u razdoblju od prvih najava o donošenju novog hrvatskog ustava pokazuje da teze o najavi ‘izbacivanja’ Srba ne stoje. Nema dvojbe da je bila riječ o optužbama koje su trebale opravdati daljnje ekstremističke postupke vodstva SDS-a u Hrvatskoj uperene protiv teritorijalnog integriteta i suvereniteta RH."(Eng. "The accusation that the Croatian government allegedly wanted to oust the Serbs from the constitution of Republic of Croatia are also followed by the accusation that with the adoption of the amendments and the constitution of Croatia in December 22nd 1990 they allegedly lost the constitutionality in Croatia. The chronology of the events during the period from the first announcements about the adoption of the new Croatian constitution shows that the thesis about the announcement of 'ousting' of the Serbs does not stand. There is no doubt that these were accusations which had to justify further extremist action of the SDS [Serbian political party in Croatia] in Croatia pointed against the territorial integrity and sovereignity of Croatia")...and there is more but I will leave it at that for some other time since this is already getting too long. So anyway, this is the source we use for the current sentence which says "Amid political changes during the breakup of Yugoslavia and following the Croatian Democratic Union's victory in the 1990 general election, the Croatian Parliament ratified a new constitution in December 1990 which changed the status of Serbs from a constitutional nation to a national minority, listed with other minorities. I find that ironic, a forgery and above all indeed hilarious. And the people here who come with "arguments" such as "I am a lawyer" or "I share passion for law", and think that will count against the references and the constitution itself - which is clear and direct, is just laughable. Obviously if these ridiculous "arguments" continue I will be forced to ask for a neutral opinion...preferably from someone who actually understands what a comma means in the middle of the sentence in a legal document. Some also think they can force their POV on Wikipedia using words such as "consensus" and whatnot...yes we should have a consensus but consensus based on facts not your personal views and forgery. Shokatz (talk) 00:27, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
Sources backing up that Serbs were a constituent nation along with Croats in SR Croatia:
- Yugoslavia Through Documents: From Its Creation to Its Dissolution edited by Snežana Trifunovska, page 477, it says: "at the Second and Third sessions of the National Anti-Fascist Council of the Peoples Liberation of Croatia (ZAVNOH),...,the equality of the Serbian and the Croatian nations, as constituent nations of the federal unit of Croatia, were recognized in every respect." And then at bottom of the page goes in detail.
- Integration and Stabilization: A Monetary View by George Macesich, page 24, it says: "The secessionist Zagreb regime first removed from the Croatian Constitution the constituent nation status of Serbs living in Croatia."
- The Quality of Government by Bo Rothstein, page 89, it says: "Since the constitution of the Yugoslavian Federation regarded the Serbs in Croatia as constituent nation of the Republic of Croatia, this important change..."
- Soft Borders by Julie Mostov, page 67, it says: "Serbs living in Croatia had been members of a constituent nation while Croatia was part f Yugoslavia."
This is just a start. There seems to bee plenty of sources to back up Serbs being a constituent nation in SR Croatia. I will bring more. FkpCascais (talk) 02:19, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
- Actually the second and third sessions spoke nothing about "constitutional nations", it only said that Croats and Serbs are equal in all respect and enjoy the same rights, as well as that other nations and nationalities will enjoy equal rights as well. In fact not even the constitutions themselves speak of such terms as "constitutional nations". As for the other sources what is the primary source of those must be asked? The constitution of SR Croatia? As I have shown here, clearly it says quite the opposite. I have posted a primary source which clearly states that Croatia is a "national state of Croatian people" and after a comma "a state of Serbs in Croatia and other nationalities". It is more than clear that the primary source in this case has precedence over all other secondary sources you posted which are mere (mis)interpretations.
- To quote the entire passage on this matter written by Dr.Jareb (an expert on this matter who wrote the most detailed discussion on this matter) in his book "Croatian National Symbols" he says next: "Optužbe o tome da su hrvatske vlasti navodno željele izbaciti Srbe iz Ustava RH prate i optužbe da su usvajanjem amandmana i Ustava RH od 22. prosinca 1990. oni navodno izgubili konstitutivnost u Hrvatskoj. Kronologija događaja u razdoblju od prvih najava o donošenju novog hrvatskog ustava pokazuje da teze o najavi ‘izbacivanja’ Srba ne stoje. Nema dvojbe da je bila riječ o optužbama koje su trebale opravdati daljnje ekstremističke postupke vodstva SDS-a u Hrvatskoj uperene protiv teritorijalnog integriteta i suvereniteta RH. Teza o gubitku konstitutivnosti podrazumijevala bi da je takvo što do tada i postojalo, odnosno da je to bilo određeno odredbama Ustava SRH. Analiza toga Ustava pokazuje da to nije bio slučaj. Kao prvo treba istaknuti da sam pojam ‘konstitutivnosti’ nije u njemu nigdje upotrijebljen. U njegovu članu 1. SRH je definirana kao ‘nacionalna država hrvatskog naroda, država srpskog naroda u Hrvatskoj i država narodnosti koje u njoj žive’. Tvrdnju da je SRH nacionalna država hrvatskog naroda te država drugih naroda i narodnosti koji u njoj žive pojačana je i tvrdnjama iz Osnovnih načela Ustava SRH, odlomka I, u kojem je utvrđeno da je hrvatski ‘narod, zajedno sa srpskim narodom i narodnostima u Hrvatskoj, (…), izvojevao (…) u zajedničkoj borbi s drugim narodima i narodnostima Jugoslavije u narodnooslobodilačkom ratu i socijalističkoj revoluciji nacionalnu slobodu, (…), te uspostavio svoju državu – Socijalističku Republiku Hrvatsku (…).’ Navedeni tekst nedvosmisleno i u jednini označava upravo hrvatski narod kao onaj koji je uspostavio SRH. Prema tome je ona bila definirana kao nacionalna država tek jednog naroda, i to hrvatskog. Ime srpskog naroda bilo je doduše izdvojeno, no unatoč tome navedena definicija nije SRH označila i nacionalnom državom srpskog naroda. Tek takva definicija mogla bi se prihvatiti kao dokaz da je srpski narod u Hrvatskoj bio konstitutivan. Također treba upozoriti na korištenje termina ‘narod’ i ‘narodnost’ u tom ustavu. Naime, niti Ustav SRH, niti Ustav SFRJ (također iz 1974.) nije poznavao pojam ‘nacionalna manjina’ (ili slične pojmove za označavanje manjine). Iznimka od toga pravila jest formulacija u odlomku VII Osnovnih načela Ustava SFRJ iz 1974., u kojoj stoji da se SFRJ među ostalim zalaže i za ‘poštovanje prava nacionalnih manjina, uključujući prava dijelova naroda Jugoslavije koji žive u drugim zemljama kao nacionalne manjine’. Obzirom da se cijeli odlomak VII odnosi na međunarodne odnose, razložno je pretpostaviti da su u njemu upotrijebljeni termini uobičajeni u međunarodnom pravu. U SFRJ su status ‘naroda’ imali pripadnici onih naroda čije su nacionalne države bile u njezinu sastavu. Riječ je bila o Srbima, Hrvatima, Slovencima, Makedoncima, Crnogorcima i Muslimanima. Prema tome su i Makedonci, i Slovenci, i Muslimani i Crnogorci imali u SR Hrvatskoj, kao i u svim drugim saveznim republikama status naroda, bez obzira na svoju brojnost, tradicionalnu prisutnost i slično. Pripadnici svih ostalih naroda, čije su matične nacionalne države bile izvan sastava SFRJ, imali su status ‘narodnosti’, također bez obzira na broj i druge značajke. Tako se moglo dogoditi da su Albanci, koji su činili veliku većinu stanovnika Kosova (a činili su i značajan postotak stanovništva Makedonije i Crne Gore), imali status narodnosti, dok su malobrojniji Crnogorci i Makedonci imali status naroda. Inače Ustav SFRJ iz 1974. nigdje izričito ne definira pojam naroda, odnosno pojam narodnosti. Formulacija u Uvodnom dijelu toga ustava, u Osnovnim načelima, odlomak I, govori da su se narodi Jugoslavije, zajedno s narodnostima s kojima žive, ujedinili u saveznu republiku slobodnih i ravnopravnih naroda i narodnosti, upućuje na to da su narodima držani oni narodi čije su nacionalne države bile dijelom SFRJ kao njezine savezne republike. Iznimka su bili bosanskohercegovački Muslimani. Obzirom da je pet republika istovremeno bilo nacionalnim državama nekoga od naroda u SFRJ, a da je BiH bila ustavno definirana kao tronarodna država (država Muslimana, Hrvata i Srba), vrlo je lako doći do odgovora na pitanje što su to ‘narodi Jugoslavije’, a što su narodnosti. Vrlo je precizno pojam naroda i narodnosti, odnosno njihovih jezika, razložen u enciklopedijskoj natuknici ‘Jugoslavija’, u odlomku autora Augusta Kovačeca, ‘Jezici i pisma naroda i narodnosti’ (Enciklopedija Jugoslavije, sv. 6, Jap-Kat, Zagreb 1990., 241.-251.). Pojam ‘manjina’ uveden je tek Ustavom RH od 22. prosinca 1990. godine. Izvorišne osnove toga ustava govore o RH kao ‘nacionalnoj državi hrvatskoga naroda’, što je identično formulaciji iz Ustava SRH iz 1974. godine. U nastavku te formulacije stoji i to da je RH ‘država pripadnika inih naroda i manjina, koji su njezini državljani: Srba, Muslimana, Slovenaca, Čeha, Slovaka (…).’ Srbi u Hrvatskoj (ovaj put definirani i kao državljani RH) na tom su popisu stavljeni na prvo mjesto, a izvorišne osnove izričito spominju ‘narode i manjine’. Prema tome je logično zaključiti da su Srbi (i ne samo oni) držani narodom. Oni su tretirani na isti način kao i u ustavu iz 1974. godine, a jedina je razlika što su osim njih navedeni i drugi narodi i manjine. To dokazuje da Srbi nisu imali ni najmanje razloga za nezadovoljstvo ustavnim rješenjima. ‘Zločesta’ tumačenja njihovog nezadovoljstva mogla bi dovesti i do zaključka da je vođama Srba u Hrvatskoj i njihovim brojnim sljedbenicima tada smetalo to što su uz njih nabrojeni i drugi narodi i manjine. Sukladno tome isto bi se tako ‘zločesto’ moglo zaključiti da su takvi ‘pravi’ Srbi držali da su vredniji od drugih ljudi, što bi bacilo sasvim novo svjetlo na njihove prigovore o gubitku prava. Također treba primijetiti da se Izvorišne osnove ustava RH iz 1990. godine mogu usporediti s Osnovnim načelima Ustava SRH iz 1974. godine. Važno je istaknuti da su u tim dijelovima ovih dvaju ustava tek naznačena temeljna ustavna načela, koja su razrađena u nastavku ustavnog teksta, u njihovim normativnim dijelovima. Treba istaknuti i činjenicu da je formulacija o nacionalnom određenju u Ustavu SRH bila istodobno integralnim dijelom Osnovnih načela (u odlomku I) i normativnog dijela Ustava (član 1.). U Ustavu RH od 22. prosinca 1990. godine formulacija o nacionalnom određenju nazočna je samo u Izvorišnim načelima, dok normativni dio ne sadrži ništa slično. U tom se dijelu govori isključivo o općim pravima svih državljana, te je u članku 14. izričito navedeno da građani RH ‘imaju sva prava i slobode, neovisno o njihovoj rasi, boji kože, spolu, jeziku, vjeri, političkom ili drugom uvjerenju, nacionalnom ili socijalnom uvjerenju (…).’ U članku 15. stoji da su u RH ‘ravnopravni (…) pripadnici svih naroda i manjina’, a svima njima jamči se ‘sloboda izražavanja narodnosne pripadnosti, slobodno služenje svojim jezikom i pismom i kulturna autonomija.’ Uz to se u članku 12. jamči da se uz hrvatski jezik i latinično pismo ‘u službenu uporabu (…) može uvesti i drugi jezik te ćirilično ili koje drugo pismo, pod uvjetima propisanim zakonom’. Držim da usporedba rješenja u navedena dva ustava pokazuje da Srbi nisu imali nikakvog razloga za nezadovoljstvo novim ustavnim rješenjima, nego da razloge za njihovu pobunu i kasniju agresiju JNA i srpskih paravojnih skupina na RH treba tražiti na drugim mjestima.“ (eng. "The accusation that the Croatian government allegedly wanted to oust the Serbs from the constitution of Republic of Croatia are also followed by the accusation that with the adoption of the amendments and the constitution of Croatia in December 22nd 1990 they allegedly lost the constitutionality in Croatia. The chronology of the events during the period from the first announcements about the adoption of the new Croatian constitution shows that the thesis about the announcement of 'ousting' of the Serbs does not stand. There is no doubt that these were accusations which had to justify further extremist action of the SDS in Croatia pointed against the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Croatia. Thesis about the loss of constitutionality would then allude that such a thing until then existed, apropos that it was defined by the provisions of the constitution of SRC. Analysis of that constitution shows that was not the case. First we should emphasize that the very term "constitutionality" was not even used anywhere in it. In it's Chapter 1 SRC is defined as 'national state of Croatian people, state of Serbian people in Croatia and state of nationalities which live in it'. The claim that SRC is a national state of Croatian people and state of other nations and nationalities who live in it is strengthened by the provisions from the General Principle of the constitution SRC, passage I, in which it is found that 'Croatian people, along with Serbian nation and nationalities in Croatia, (...), won (...) in a common struggle with other nations and nationalities of Yugoslavia in a liberation war and socialist revolution it's national freedom, (...), and founded it's state - Socialist Republic of Croatia (...)'. The quote text undoubtedly and in singular terms mark directly Croatian people as the one who established SRC. According to that fact it [SRC] was defined as national state of only one nations, the the Croatian nation. The name of Serbian nation was however emphasized, but regardless of that the mentioned definition did not mark SRC as the national state of Serbian people. Only then such a definition could be accepted as proof that Serbian people in Croatia were constitutional. Also we should caution about the use of the terms 'nation' and 'nationality' in that constitution. Namely, neither constitution of SRC, nor the constitution of SFRY (also from 1974) did not know the term 'national minority' (or other similar terms for denotation of national minority). The exception from that rule is the formulation in the section VII of the General Principle of the constitution of SFRY from 1974, in which stands that the SFRY among everything else also advocates for 'respecting the rights of national minorities, including the rights of the parts of the people's of Yugoslavia who live in other countries as national minorities'. Considering that the entire section VII is refers to international relations, it is reasonably to assume that the terms used within it were those used in international law. In SFRY the status of 'nations' had the member of those people whose national states were within it's composition. We are talking about Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, Macedonian, Montenegrins and Muslims. So according to that Macedonians, Slovene, Muslims and Montenegrins also had the status of nations in SR Croatia, as in all other federal republics, regardless of their numbers, traditional presence and similar cases. Members of all other nations, whose home national stats were outside the composition of SFRY, had the status of 'nationalities', also regardless the numbers and other significant factors. So it could happen that Albanians, who made a large majority of Kosovo (and they also constituted a large portion of Macedonian and Montenegrin population), had the status of nationalities, while the far less numerous Montenegrins and Macedonians had the status of nations. Otherwise the constitution of SFRY from 1974 does not define the terms of nation, and nationalities respectively. Formulation in the introductory part of that part of the constitution, in General terms, Chapter I, say that the nations of Yugoslavia, together with the nationalities with which they live, united in a federal republic of free and equal nations and nationalities, points to the fact that nations were considered those whose people had national states as part of SFRY as it's national republics. The exception were Muslims of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Considering that five republics were at the same time national states of one of nations in SFRY, and that Bosnia-Herzegovina was constitutionally defined as tri-nation state (state of Muslims, Croats and Serbs), it is very easy to come to an answer what are the 'nations of Yugoslavia', and what are nationalities. The terms of nation and nationalities, and their respective languages, were very precisely defined in the encyclopedic footnote 'Yugoslavia', in the chapter written by the author August Kovacec, 'Languages and alphabets of nations and nationalities' (Encyclopedia of Yugoslavia, volume 6, Jap-Kat, zagreb 1990., pages 241-251). The term 'minority' was introduced only with the constitution of December 22 1990. The basic principles of that constitution talk about Republic of Croatia as 'national state of Croatian people', which is identical to formulation from the constitution of SRC from 1974. In continuation of that formulation also stands that Republic of Croatia is a 'state of members of other nations and minorities, which are its citizens: Serbs, Muslims, Slovenes, Czechs, Slovaks (...)'. Serbs in Croatia (this time defined as citizens of Croatia) were put on the first place of that list, and the basic principle explicitly mention 'nations and minorities'. According to that it would be logically to conclude that Serbs (and not just them) were considered a nation. They were treated in the same way as in the constitution from 1974, and the only difference that besides them other nations and minorities were mentioned as well. 'Mean' interpretations of their dissatisfaction could lead us also to the conclusion that the leaders of Serbs in Croatia and their numerous followers were bothered that besides them other nations and nationalities were mentioned. And according with that we could also be 'naughty' and conclude that such 'real' Serbs held that they were more important than all others, which would give us a completely new light on their complaints about the loss of their rights. Also we should notice that the Basic Principles of the constitution of Croatia from 1990 can also be compared with the Basic Principle from the constitution of SRC from 1974. It is important to emphasize that in those parts of these two constitutions the basic constitutional principles are only hinted, which are more detailed in the continuation of the text of the constitution, in their normative parts. We should also emphasize the fact that the formulation about national self-determination in the constitution of SRC was also integral part of General Principle (in Chapter I) and normative part of the Constitution (Head 1). In the constitution from December 22 1990 formulation about national self-determination is present only in the Basic principle, while the normative part does not contain anything similar. That part speak explicitly about general rights of all citizens, and in the chapter 14 it is explicitly stated that citizens of Croatia 'have all rights and liberties, regardless of their race, skin color, gender, language, religion, political or other conviction, national or social conviction (...).' In chapter 15 it stands that in Croatia 'members of all nations and minorities are equal', and to all of them 'the freedom of expression of their national affiliation, free use of their language and scripture, including cultural autonomy' is guaranteed. Along with that in the chapter 12 it is guaranteed that along with Croatian language and latin alphabet 'in official use (...) could also be introduced other language and Cyrillic scripture or any other scripture, under the condition of prescribed law'. I consider that the comparison of the solutions in the two mentioned constitutions shows that Serbs in Croatia had no reasons to be unsatisfied with the new constitutional amendments, but that the reasons for their rebellion and later aggression of YNA and Serbian paramilitary groups on Croatia should be looked at in other places." Shokatz (talk) 05:29, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
- I agree with FkpCascais. Serbs in Croatia were a constituent nation, otherwise they wouldn't be mentioned explicitly in the Constitution. So please Shokatz stop edit warring, you are the only person who is on the other side. Now he is trying to hide his ignorance by making a mess of this discussion. Remember Sokatz, if you report someone your behavior will also be in the spotlight. ;) Tnx --Tuvixer (talk) 10:01, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
- Sokatz, you are not able to read the Constitution, or to better say you are not tha authority and I don't know why do you think that you are one, so citing the articles of the Constitution gives no plus to your argument. they are no sources at all. Find valid sources who back your claim, or stop this. Tnx --Tuvixer (talk) 10:04, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
- Exactly as Tuvixer says. And btw, it is not up to us to interpret the constitution, but to gather what secondary sources say about the subject. And from what I see secondary sources pretty much agree Serbs were constituent nation in SR Croatia. FkpCascais (talk) 11:38, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
- First your actions will be under scrutiny as well "my friend" so it goes both ways. Second, I am not interpreting anything...I just poted an entire passage from the foremost authority from the man who wrote the most extensive analysis on this issue and it's clear what he says. Saying that a primary source which in this case is a constitution (we are not talking about bio of some living person or similar) is not a source but bunch of random references which mention the misinterpretation and which repeat the same nationalist mantra using by the SDS from the 90s is laughable. Show me part in the constitution which says that Croatia was a national state of Serbs or that they were constitutional and then we can talk. Also do not remove the tags. Shokatz (talk) 14:31, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
- Exactly as Tuvixer says. And btw, it is not up to us to interpret the constitution, but to gather what secondary sources say about the subject. And from what I see secondary sources pretty much agree Serbs were constituent nation in SR Croatia. FkpCascais (talk) 11:38, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
- Sokatz please stop edit warring. Tnx The constitution can't be the source because you are obviously misreading it. You are the only person here who is saying that Serbs weren't a constitutive nation. You are alone in this, so please stop edit warring and present some reliable sources. FkpCascais has provided 4, I think, so Sokatz start doing that or we have nothing to discuss more. Also Jareb is a right-wing fanatic who is obsessed with the World War II puppet state, the so called NDH, and the Ustase regime. He is not a valid source. --Tuvixer (talk) 15:15, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
- No, you stop edit warring. Who are you to say I am "misreading" it...I say you are misreading it. It is a primary source stating nothing...I repeat NOTHING about "constitutionality" of Serbs in Croatia. It says clearly that Croatia was and is a "national state of Croatian people". Your "arguments" are invalid, you have not addressed a single issue except contant personal remarks...and now even Dr.Jareb (the same source you misuse to strengthen that forgery) is "right-wing nationalist". I would remind you that labeling people and outright ignoring the discussion by calling other people insane, fascist or claiming that you are "a lawyer" or that others "misread" the sources are not valid arguments and go against Wikipedia policy. The tag will stay until you discuss this issue properly. Shokatz (talk) 16:06, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
Hello. I took some time and actually read all of this. I'm somewhat familiar with the topic so i think i can contribute. I would like for us to solve some initial misunderstandings about the issue. The big question is the meaning of the phrase "constitutive", so can we first establish a shared definition of the term? Shokatz, FkpCascais ,Tuvixer, 109.121.37.112. The definition of the term constitute is the following "to establish (laws, an institution, etc.).". So do we all agree that a constitutive nation is the one who established SRC? If we all agree upon that the we can see in the constitution about who established SRC. 141.138.50.1 (talk) 22:58, 21 August 2015 (UTC)
- I believe I have already touched that issue and quoted a direct passage from the 1947 constitution which in Article 2 says next:
- "Ostvarujuci u svojoj oslobodilackoj borbi u bratskom jedinstvu sa Srbima u Hrvatskoj, i u zajednickoj borbi svih naroda Jugoslavije svoju narodnu drzavu - Narodnu Republiku Hrvatsku, hrvatski se narod, izrazavajuci svoju slobodnu volju, a na temelju prava na samoodredjenje - ukljucujuci pravo odcjepljenje i ujedinjenje s drugim narodima - ujedinio na temelju nacela ravnopravnosti s ostalim narodima Jugoslavije i njihovim narodnim republikama: NR Srbijom, NR Slovenijom, NR BiH, NR Makedonijom i NR Crnom Gorom u zajednicku, saveznu drzavu - FNR Jugoslaviju." (eng. " Realizing in their liberation struggle in fraternal unity with the Serbs in Croatia, and in the common struggle of all peoples of Yugoslavia their national state - the People's Republic of Croatia, the Croatian people, expressing their free will, based on the right to self-determination - including the right to secession and unification with other nations - united on the basis of the principle of equality with other peoples of Yugoslavia and their people's republics: PR Serbia, PR Slovenia, PR Bosnia and Herzegovina, PR Macedonia and PR Montenegro in common, federal state - FNR Yugoslavia. ")
- It clearly says that it is the Croatian people who expressed it's free will [realizing its national state – PR Croatia] united with other people's and their national republics. It couldn't be more clear. This is even more clear if you can understand Croatian (or Serbo-Croatian or however you want to call it) which in the word „united“ uses singular form „ujedinio“ and refers specifically to Croatian people as the culprit. The same article is present in the 1974 constitution as well. Shokatz (talk) 05:35, 22 August 2015 (UTC)
- Yes, this this passage is defining Croatian nation and only Croatian nation as the one who constituted SRC. So where's the problem? Could you post a link to this constitution and the constitution of 1974? I think the 1974 constitution has similar sentence on its beginning. Well usually we wouldn't need to look the previous constitutions to the 1974 constitution, since that was the valid constitution at that time, but for the question of "constituting" a state we can look the past constitutions up to where a state is constituted, since that can not change in the newer versions of the constitution which is evolving. 141.136.206.141 (talk) 10:08, 22 August 2015 (UTC)
- The problem is that users like Tuvixer and FkpCascais simply refuse these sources and not only that...they refuse the discussion here. And yes the same passage is found in the 1974 constitution as well but the 1974 constitution also included a new passage, more direct and definitive stating that Croatia is a "national state of Croatian people". I've also quoted the entire passage from Dr. Jareb's book "Croatian National Symbols" where he discusses this issue in detail...explaining what the term "narod" and "narodnost" would mean in those constitution and ultimately what the "constituitive nation" would mean. The links for 1947 and 1974 constitutions were posted as well...but here they are again: 1947 1974 Shokatz (talk) 22:22, 22 August 2015 (UTC)
- Yes, this this passage is defining Croatian nation and only Croatian nation as the one who constituted SRC. So where's the problem? Could you post a link to this constitution and the constitution of 1974? I think the 1974 constitution has similar sentence on its beginning. Well usually we wouldn't need to look the previous constitutions to the 1974 constitution, since that was the valid constitution at that time, but for the question of "constituting" a state we can look the past constitutions up to where a state is constituted, since that can not change in the newer versions of the constitution which is evolving. 141.136.206.141 (talk) 10:08, 22 August 2015 (UTC)
- Thank you. I would like to hear from FkpCascais ,Tuvixer, 109.121.37.112 where's the problem? What is their definition of "constitutive" and why they see both Serbs and Croats defined as constitutive. I will ping them once more before i start reverting.I for a fact know that Serbian propaganda is still repeating this lie from the 90', although the very same question was not even put before the Badinter's commission because it was futile. To remind all, the Badinter's commission was constituted to deal with legal questions during the breakup of Yugoslavia. Serbian side had put several questions in front of it, but never the question of Serbian constitutive status in "Croatia". That for me is a clear admission by Serbia that there were no such status. Also a clear indication that there was no such status is international recognition of Croatia by all counties in the world, even Serbia itself. Instead, Serbia had put another question which seemed less futile before the Badinter's commission. The question about succession of nation over republics. The result of this question being favorable to the Serbs would be the same as the previous question, if even not more favorable. The thing is that Serbs did not want Croats in their new Yugoslavia (in another words, Greater Serbia), so they wanted to carve only a portion of Croatia that they had designated to became Serbian territory. With the question they asked the Badinter's commission they would be allowed to do that. With the question of this topic they wouldn't be allowed to carve only a portion of Croatia but only to revert Croatian decision to success. That would mean whole Croatia would be left within Yugoslavia. Of course, that was against the Yugoslav constitution, and that had been confirmed by Badinter's commission. I would like to hear from the people who object the answer to why the question of the supposed Serbian constitutive status was not put before the Badinter's commission. 89.164.239.139 (talk) 10:44, 23 August 2015 (UTC)
- You will not be reverting anything, you are blocked user Michael Cambridge editing as IP (see IP 141 contributions). FkpCascais (talk) 10:59, 23 August 2015 (UTC)
- Thank you. I would like to hear from FkpCascais ,Tuvixer, 109.121.37.112 where's the problem? What is their definition of "constitutive" and why they see both Serbs and Croats defined as constitutive. I will ping them once more before i start reverting.I for a fact know that Serbian propaganda is still repeating this lie from the 90', although the very same question was not even put before the Badinter's commission because it was futile. To remind all, the Badinter's commission was constituted to deal with legal questions during the breakup of Yugoslavia. Serbian side had put several questions in front of it, but never the question of Serbian constitutive status in "Croatia". That for me is a clear admission by Serbia that there were no such status. Also a clear indication that there was no such status is international recognition of Croatia by all counties in the world, even Serbia itself. Instead, Serbia had put another question which seemed less futile before the Badinter's commission. The question about succession of nation over republics. The result of this question being favorable to the Serbs would be the same as the previous question, if even not more favorable. The thing is that Serbs did not want Croats in their new Yugoslavia (in another words, Greater Serbia), so they wanted to carve only a portion of Croatia that they had designated to became Serbian territory. With the question they asked the Badinter's commission they would be allowed to do that. With the question of this topic they wouldn't be allowed to carve only a portion of Croatia but only to revert Croatian decision to success. That would mean whole Croatia would be left within Yugoslavia. Of course, that was against the Yugoslav constitution, and that had been confirmed by Badinter's commission. I would like to hear from the people who object the answer to why the question of the supposed Serbian constitutive status was not put before the Badinter's commission. 89.164.239.139 (talk) 10:44, 23 August 2015 (UTC)
- You can make a sock puppet report if you wish, but you can't designate someone as a sock and remove his edits. 89.164.239.139 (talk) 11:18, 23 August 2015 (UTC)