Talk:Nagaland/Archive 1

Tone of Article

 * "Nagaland may not be everybody's cup of tea, but it is a place worth visiting. At a time when people around the world are stressed-out due to heavy workloads and the fast pace of their daily lives, Nagaland offers a place where you can put the brakes on, recharge your energy, feel good about yourself, go back to basics and learn to appreciate life and Mother Nature."

This does not sound "encyclopedic," and instead sounds a bit like a sales brochure. I think perhaps the authors should try to limit themselves to neutrally describing the region and salient related issues, and leave their travel preferences for another article. Dxco 04:59, 4 October 2005 (UTC)

missionaries causing problems
How come there's no mention of the missionaries causing agitation?--Dangerous-Boy 09:23, 21 March 2006 (UTC)

What kind of agitations?

lacking neutrality
--Phileofish 04:02, 12 October 2007 (UTC)this article, as it is now written, has a subtle bias which is factually inaccurate. To my knowledge, there is no such thing as Indo-Mongolian. The Nagas are from Mongolian stock and do not share the ethnicity of Assamese, or the majority of Indians. Nagaland, as an entity only came into being in 1963. Before that time it was a district in Assam. Before Indian independence in 1947 approximately half of what is today Nagaland was under British India. The other half was an un-administered territory. The British annexed the Naga territory in the 1800's. Nagaland or the Naga territory was never a part of present day Manipur. It should be mentioned that terrible human rights violations have occurred when the Indian army invaded the Naga territories. Presently, Nagaland would probably have to be considered a disputed territory.

missionary agitation?
--Phileofish 04:07, 12 October 2007 (UTC)there has been no evidence to support the notion that western missionaries in any way stirred up the Nagas to separate from India. As far as Christianity goes, the Nagas started to convert to Christianity in the 1850's long before Indian independence. The claim of missionary agitation is an often heard allegation made mostly by pro-Hindu nationalists. It has no basis in fact.

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WP:INDIA Banner/Nagaland Addition
Note: WP India Project Banner with Nagaland workgroup parameters was added to this article talk page because the article falls under Category:Puducherry or its subcategories. Should you feel this addition is inappropriate, please undo my changes and update/remove the relavent categories to the article --  Amartyabag   TALK2ME  10:05, 26 June 2008 (UTC)

NPOV dispute[history]
Seems to me the Nagaland history section suffers from the same problem as the Manipur history. Its even worse. Here is one example : reference to "Nagaland" is found in Mahabharata? An English word in the Mahabharata? First there is the usual problem of historical authenticity of a religious text, and discussion of characters from such a book in the history of Nagaland. Second, how do we know Nagas were always called as such in antiquity, and identifying the Nagas of today with the Nagas mentioned in Mahabharata.

What is the geographical boundary of this "Nagaland" mentioned in Mahabharata? It is a fact that the present boundary is a relatively modern one, and whom outsiders call Nagas are divided into various tribes without a common national boundary until recently. Using a religious text to support historical fact is not warranted. On its own it does not add anything to the early history of Nagaland or the Naga people. Cosmicstring (talk) 18:30, 26 June 2008 (UTC)

One sided account of History
The brief overview of the History of Nagaland is insubstantial and clearly lacks neutrality. The Naga political struggle is a highly sensitive ongoing issue and therefore any effort to highlight its ‘nationalist activities’ should be treated with utmost consideration and reflect the events that led to its genesis. It is extremely important to understand that the Nagas’ call for a separate nation and self determination didn’t suddenly emerge on the wake of India’s independence. Officially it can be traced back to the memorandum of 1929 submitted by the Naga Club to Simon Commission stating that the Nagas should be left alone to determine their political future when the British decide to leave India.

In accordance with the memorandum, the Government of India Act 1935 was passed which declared the Naga Hills to be an “Excluded Area”, leaving the Nagas outside the framework and jurisdiction of Indian policy. In July 1947, when a delegation of Naga National Council (NNC) met Mahatma Gandhi, he is quoted to have said that the Nagas have every right to be independent if they did not wish to join the Indian Union .Unfortunately, Gandhi was assassinated the following year, leaving the fate of the Nagas at the mercy of the new leaders of independent India. It is equally important to take note of the Plebiscite of 1951 where an overwhelming 99 % of the Naga population opted for independence. Naturally such verdict didn’t go down well with the Indian leaders and the Plebiscite stood nullified. Interestingly, on hearing the verdict of the plebiscite, Nehru exploded and quoted his infamous words,''“Whether Heaven falls or India goes to pieces and blood runs red in the country, I don’t care whether I am here or for that matter any other body comes in, I don’t care. Nagas will not be allowed to become independent.”''

Such is the irony that this very same man had earlier in 1946 stated that,” The tribal areas are defined as being those long frontiers of India which are neither part of India nor Burma, nor of Indian states nor any foreign power”. The history account fails to highlight the gross violation of human rights committed by the Indian Army in the Naga soil. Various Acts such as The Assam Maintenance of Public Order (Autonomous District) Act 1953 and The Assam Disturbed Area Act 1955 were passed in the Indian parliament in the name of ‘maintaining law and order’ which curbed the freedom of expression of the Naga people. The controversial Armed Forces (Special Powers) Regulation of 1958 bestowed unimaginable rights to the Indian army personnel even down to the level of low ranked officers to shoot, kill and arrest without warrant any individuals coming under suspicion of ‘unlawful activities’. The reign of terror that subsequently followed is nothing short of pure aggression.

The reason why am providing this background is because Wikipedia is one of the most popular source for reference worldwide and hence such one sided perspective can be very misleading. The point that I am trying to make here is that the usage of terms such as ‘restore order’ and various references to attacks on the ‘Indians’ (read second paragraph of history) are highly debatable and indicates bias. What about the attacks on the Nagas and the innumerable casualties suffered by them who were obviously outnumbered and had every right to defend their homeland? In keeping with the neutrality policy of Wikipedia I suggest that the history content be reconstructed in a manner that is truly ‘neutral’ or leave out the political issue altogether.Proudhighlander (talk) 15:41, 19 September 2008 (UTC)

Morung Express
What does Morung mean? I see no reference to it on the newspaper's webpage, nor in this article. A Wikipedia search for the term yields nothing, and a Google search yields primarily links regarding the newspaper, not any other (original) meaning of the term. Just out of curiosity, 15:06, 20 November 2008 (UTC)

Morung is a term for Men's only dormitory (or hostel). Commonly used in the past olden days. Not practiced nowadays.

Check the current census of the Nagaland (2011) for current detail information. Check the state government websites. Nagas are culturally & in tradition 100% different from any other communities of India. We (Nagas) are strong, determined & aggressive bunch of people & we're proud of our roots. Visit Nagaland, we welcome u all people of the world. (sammy z)

Will update the census for the State. R N Zhasa — Preceding unsigned comment added by R N Zhasa (talk • contribs) 09:49, 17 April 2011 (UTC)

Statistics provided
The statitical information provided are largely from 2001 Census. The current census results 2011 need to be included at the earliest.

R N Zhasa (talk) 17:51, 19 April 2011 (UTC)

Updating and contribution
There is very little information on Nagaland posted though there are a lot of sources. We must find more information and get the page on our state up-to-date and at par with the similar pages on other States. So, please contribute more.

R N Zhasa (talk) 17:55, 19 April 2011 (UTC)

noINSUREKTNi/intro/infobox??
. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 111.184.194.157 (talk) 18:17, 6 August 2011 (UTC)

Education
I noticed the article is missing a section about education (I believe all other states has one). I don't have the knowledge to write one though. --Muhandes (talk) 07:44, 27 February 2012 (UTC)

Removed the State name in Hindi
Removed State name in Hindi, as official language of the State is English. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Bhvintri (talk • contribs) 15:18, 4 April 2012 (UTC)

History
Nagaland before the arrival of the British was part of Manipur under the Manipuri administration as Thibomei and Thimbong districts etc. The word Naga is perhaps a misnomer derived from Bengaly meaning naked as most people were semi naked when the British explored this hill districts of Manipur. The people were originally referred to as Chingmee (Hill People) or Hao (Tribes) in the history of Manipur. With the permission of Manipuri king Britain explored deep inside the naga hills in search of trade route etc.

Who's writing this stuff? I must confess that I have never before known that Nagaland used to be a part of Manipur. This is patently untrue and is absolutely unverifiable. And what of the nugget of info that in the *history of Manipur*, the Nagas used to be known by such-and-such names? How in heaven's name is this of any relevance to the *history of Nagaland*?

155.212.77.138 00:22, 10 October 2007 (UTC) Kardu

I think that it is largely irrelevant since the term Naga is rather well established. If the author could verify and provide a source of information as to the origin of the collective terms of the Naga people then fine from a historical perspective. 160.44.230.210 (talk) 11:56, 30 August 2013 (UTC)

Road to statehood
- The content in "Road to statehood" needs better, stable (non-dead link) reliable citations. The content needs to be arranged chronologically. Some text is repetitive, which is unnecessary.

For example, the following is stated twice, "In June 1946, the Naga National Council submitted a four point memorandum to officials discussing the independence of India from British colonial rule. The memorandum strongly protested against the grouping of Assam with Bengal and asserted that Naga Hills should be constitutionally included in an autonomous Assam, in a free India, with local autonomy, due safeguards and separate electorate for the Naga tribes." This is listed again later under June 1946 four point memorandum. Such repetitions are inappropriate, see wikipedia's style guideline. Please remove one of the duplicates. Rsangma (talk) 12:51, 14 November 2014 (UTC)

World War II
While Kohima/Imphal battles were important to WWII history, particularly from British Army's POV, but its mention in this article must be done where due and with neutral point of view. Off topic and coatracking weakens this article. Nagaland has a rich and long history that deserves due respect and emphasis, because this article is about Nagaland. I have added a pertinent summary on World War II in memorial section. There is no need for two sections on World War II. If needed, I suggest we discuss and develop a consensus on it on this talk page, in light of wikipedia's guidelines and policies. Rsangma (talk) 23:13, 19 November 2014 (UTC)
 * Please explain WP:COATRACK problem. World War II was the biggest war in human history. There may be a few nations, like Rwanda, and parts of Iraq, that have seen worse since, but that list of nations is not large. It would not, IMO, include Nagaland. The memorial section is okay, as far as it goes. I think it should be merged into the now-missing World War II section. A good portion of the nation was uprooted and escaped by oxen or whatever means available, into parts unknown. Doubtless, a large number never returned. If there household goods would not fit on available transportation, it was lost or "sold" for a pittance. It took years to replace these goods. It is probably the biggest event ever to occur that affected the entire state. And being a west-ward "high water mark" for the Japanese merits some mention as well. See, for example, India in World War II, which covers the battles in some detail, and does not "skip over" them.
 * Because of WP:MEMORIAL, sections on memorials should not mention material not mentioned elsewhere in the article. That is "Memorials" mentions events not deemed worthy of mention elsewhere. It is an "eyecatcher" for editors as a section to consider removing, normally. Though this one is well-written, IMO. In short, the subsection begs the question, "Why even mention this because Wikipedia doesn't think WW II very important." Student7 (talk) 21:33, 20 November 2014 (UTC)
 * This article is about Nagaland, not about World War II. The coatracking problem happens when "a Wikipedia article that ostensibly discusses the main subject (Nagaland), but shifts to make a point about a tangential subject (Japan and World War II)." Go to the World War II article and add your Kohima/Imphal battle "high water mark" contributions there, as it may be more relevant to that topic. From "Nagaland" perspective, of the various wars and deaths over its history, a prominent and separate section on World War II is undue.
 * On WP:MEMORIAL: Wikipedia is not a place with articles dedicated to "Rest in Peace" and such memorials. However, significant museums and war memorial landmarks / infrastructures are very much a part of wikipedia. See for example War memorial, Australian War Memorial, Canadian war memorials, ANZAC War Memorial, Vietnam Veterans Memorial, and others. The Kohima memorial and Cathedral are part of Nagaland's landmarks and infrastructure. They may be included in this article because they are about Nagaland, not because they are about WW2. Rsangma (talk) 10:41, 22 November 2014 (UTC)
 * Again, unsure of your WP:COATRACK problem. The History of India is supposed to summarize the various histories of the various places in India. India is a higher level article than Nagaland. While it "summarizes" World War II, this article skips it for unconvicing reasons. No reason, actually. A war which affected nearly everyone in Nagaland (if not India) is certainly not tangential to this article. Very close to central. The appearance of World War II, with the real story told, here would attract interest from people (like me, for example) who never before heard of Nagaland. It may be hard for you to appreciate it, but outside of India, I doubt that one out of ten people could place Nagaland in its proper country/location. The fact that it really participated in an important war, would attract readers who would otherwise figure it was just "another place in India."
 * It is part of History, just as much as the tallest mountain or the longest river is part of geography. Is Mount Saramati tangential? Is Dimapur tangential (I never heard of either before reading this article)? Nagaland (and India) is forever changed by that war which occupied the world's attention for seven years or more and killed tens of millions of people.
 * Not sure why you want to avoid the truth about that war and its importance to India and the World. The editors writing the higher level articles don't. Student7 (talk) 23:47, 23 November 2014 (UTC)
 * I see nothing wrong with having a short section about war memorials and their significance. OhNo itsJamie Talk 16:21, 24 November 2014 (UTC)
 * Hello Student7, The History of India article, which you allege "summarizes World War II", does no such thing. It has no dedicated section on World War II, nor even a discussion of Imphal/Kohima, or the help India gave to China during that war. The only sentence I find is, "The British, extremely weakened by the Second World War, promised that they would leave and participated in the formation of an interim government." This article has more coverage, and I agree with OhNoItsJamie that the mentioned war memorial and its significance is appropriate. It is also sufficient.
 * The goal of this article on Nagaland is not WP:SOAPBOX, nor spicing it to "attract interest of people" like an advocacy tabloid. That would distract and weaken the article. Rsangma (talk) 17:47, 24 November 2014 (UTC)
 * For the record, when I perform a web search, I get 29,000 hits for the "Battle of Kohima", 4,100 hits for "Mount Saramati." Student7 (talk) 20:11, 24 November 2014 (UTC)


 * The Battle of Kohima was a significant WW2 battle, and as such, should be mentioned in the article. OhNo itsJamie  Talk 21:08, 24 November 2014 (UTC)


 * Just once, in appropriate section, with link to main article. No need for duplicates. Rsangma (talk) 19:02, 25 November 2014 (UTC)
 * Hello again OhNoItsJamie, See Ghosh, History of Nagaland, ISBN 978-9996069512. Ghosh makes a passing note about World War II, in his 250+ page book on Nagaland's history. However, if you feel otherwise, I will accept your third person view on this, and go with consensus. Rsangma (talk) 19:42, 25 November 2014 (UTC)
 * This article is about a place, not just "Nagaland people." A few sentences about the battle and a few sentences about memorials is hardly a violation of WP:UNDUE.  How much space one author chose to devote to the battle in a book is of no relevance to this article. OhNo itsJamie  Talk 20:32, 25 November 2014 (UTC)

Naga
Your attribution is fringe and I do not see WP:RS. Naga has been used by Indic speakers for like at least 4000 years to refer to people they consider "savages". You're quoting British Raj-era fringe stuff, engaging in WP:SYNTH, and generally not providing Wikipedic level material. Ogress 19:33, 7 September 2015 (UTC)
 * For example, what word "nok"? Cites show that was a pet Raj-era Orientalist theory that has been discounted. Ogress 19:39, 7 September 2015 (UTC)

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History
What does M.A.C.S stand for after the name GH Damant? Could this be spelled out? Torontonian1 (talk) 10:02, 4 January 2016 (UTC)

Assessment comment
Substituted at 15:25, 1 May 2016 (UTC)

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inter-ethnic conflict
Greetings!

i am starting this talk page to draw the attention of those concerned with Nagaland.

in the Nagaland page Wikipedia, there is a line in the second paragraph under Antiquity which is as follows, "The ancient name of Nagaland is 'Naganchi', derived from the Naga language."Nagaland i believe this is a misrepresentation because there is no such word in Naga language (read Nagamese- i speak Nagamese and any person speaking this language can attest to this). The thing is that Nagaland is a modern origin; a mixture of the word "Naga" and "Land" and there is no record that states otherwise. The citation given is for the subsequent line that talks about some political party demanding to the change the name and has nothing to do with the origin or 'ancient name' of Nagaland. as such it is my humble opinion that we either provide a source or remove that line.

Thank You H.S.Naga (talk) 18:20, 29 March 2020 (UTC)


 * Historical content, like the ancient name of Nagaland should be sourced using WP:HISTRS compliant sources. News sources liek these are not reliable, especially when it is a recent politically motivated demand. Not to mention that the source only mentions Naganchi once and doesn't elaborate to its history. I believe it should be removed. - Fylindfotberserk (talk) 18:27, 29 March 2020 (UTC)
 * It was first added here by an IP. The source used is this. However Geocities is not reliable. - Fylindfotberserk (talk) 18:42, 29 March 2020 (UTC)

rightly observed "...especially when it is a recent politically motivated demand"

Thank You! for the additional info and source. H.S.Naga (talk) 19:05, 29 March 2020 (UTC)


 * I'm removing that line, for being poorly sourced. If somebody has some other ideas, they can discuss it here. - Fylindfotberserk (talk) 07:39, 30 March 2020 (UTC)

highly appreciated! Thank You. H.S.Naga (talk) 18:05, 30 March 2020 (UTC)


 * You are welcome. It had to go as per our policy. I wonder why no one raised that issue. - Fylindfotberserk (talk) 18:06, 30 March 2020 (UTC)

Hello! i have removed the 'ancient name of' from the heading as i want to start another talk but i am assuming that instead of starting a new talk we can continue here...

i want to bring to your attention, and all, if any, those who are reading this, that in the 2nd paragraph there is this line: "The state has experienced insurgency, as well as an inter-ethnic conflict, since the 1950s" it is a fact and we can find abundant source regarding the 'insurgency' since 1950s however regarding the inter-ethnic conflict it is the rather the other way around: Prior to the advent of the British India, the Nagas were 'headhunters' and war between village, clans, tribes (ethnic, inter-ethnic) was rampant, even as late as 1890 and even in 1900 internecine wars were common but there was a steep decline after the experience of WW1 and WW2 and in fact 'inter-ethnic' conflict disappeared around 1950s when the movement for sovereignty brought various tribes together... as for the conflicts around and after 1980s is not inter-ethnic because it is between various factions for political issue and not based on ethnicity (and each factions usually consist of every tribe/ethnic) H.S.Naga (talk) 18:31, 30 March 2020 (UTC)


 * I'll check the accompanying sources tomorrow. Good night. - Fylindfotberserk (talk) 18:48, 30 March 2020 (UTC)


 * MY apologies, I totally forgot. Coming to the point, this source doesn't say much about post 1900 inter-ethnic conflict. To be fair, it only says that different tribes of Nagas had little contact between them except for wars and little commerse. This source doesn't mention any inter ethnic conflict either, especially after 1950s. It writes : ...armed conflict in the 1950s, page 246, which was politically motivated. So IMO, the "inter-ethnic" part can be removed when mentioned with "1950s". - Fylindfotberserk (talk) 18:07, 2 April 2020 (UTC)

Etymology of Sumi Naga
Greetings! i am starting a new topic here, although Sumi Naga has its own page, i do not know where/whom to address the talk and since Sumi Tribe falls under Nagas and Nagaland so i am posting here. i hope this is acceptable. hello i am tagging you as your intervention is required, i hope it does not inconvenience you.

i would like bring your attention to the following points: The the content titled "Clan system" is not appropriate because the Clan system should cover various clans such as Ayemi, Awomi, Achumi, Chophimi, Kinimi, Jimomi, and Yepthomi etc., that makes up Sumi Tribe and not with the origin or migration of the Sumis.

Just like the origin of the word Naga, even the origin of the word Sumi is contentious. for example Sumi were referred to as Sema up until 1960s-70s, a word given by outsiders and popularized by J.H.Hutton's book The Sema Nagas. as such the following line under the "Clan system",

the Sumi tribe has its origin name from Seo and at no point of time is the Sumi tribe name derived from tree or wood.

seems to be an attempt to assert only particular view(seo-that of three brothers origin) and subsequently suppress other views (that of originating from rituals associated with trees and stone/rock), because in literature (Jimomi, Inavi (2018), "SUMI NAGA: The Origin and Migration of the Sumi Naga", Dimapur, Heritage Publishing House, ISBN 978-93-87837-10-2) as well as in oral stories we find plenty of origin stories so i request those concerned to kindly look into the issue and change the title as well remove the above following line so that we can add a more neutral and helpful information and facts rather than assertion of biased views,

thank you H.S.Naga (talk) 17:40, 2 April 2020 (UTC)


 * The source that supports the above line, doesn't mention anything about Seo or tree/bark. This is the oldest capture I could find. If you do not want to disturb the present section, you can append another passage on Sumi as explained in the "SUMI NAGA: The Origin and Migration of the Sumi Naga", Dimapur, Heritage Publishing House, ISBN 978-93-87837-10-2. - Fylindfotberserk (talk) 18:22, 2 April 2020 (UTC)

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Ethnic terms
What is meant by "Indo-Mongoloid"? Does this term have any scientific validity? Shorne 00:40, 3 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * I think someone borrowed that bit from MSN Encarta. The term is in use, but I don't know about its scientific validity. -- Simonides 03:21, 3 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * It means the Nagas have some physical features shared with the East and Southeast Asians. The Assamese also have some Mongoloid features (see, e.g., ).  A-giau 10:46, 3 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * I know what it is intended to mean. My concern is that it is pseudoscientific. It's as if we said that people from certain other parts of India were members of the "Aryan race". Such categorisations as "Mongoloid" are suspect at best. Shorne 18:28, 3 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * Yes, given its scientific-sounding turn it could be (mis)taken as a statement of essentialist truth rather than a categorical construct. The issue is probably best addressed at Indo-Mongoloid, Mongoloid, or another article on how the scientific establishment has historically classified people in terms of physical features and how that classification has been buttressed or criticized by one ideology or another.  For this article, scare quotes may be enough.  A-giau 20:17, 3 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * I suggest that a discussion about how the scientific establishment has historically classified people in terms of physical features, etc. belongs on the race page rather than on any page about any specific race, particularly an obscure concept like Indo-Mongoloid. 130.216.224.32 01:55, 4 Oct 2004 (UTC)

Map replaced
This page should be unprotected now; I just replaced the map with one that I hope Simonides will accept. [[User:Poccil|Peter O. (Talk)]] 06:13, Oct 4, 2004 (UTC)


 * Poccil, I appreciate the help but I can't seem to see the new image you've put up. I see the old one with the last caption on it - care to point to another page which may have the same pic? The source page for the image shows the old one too, though I can see you've edited it. -- Simonides 23:18, 4 Oct 2004 (UTC)



I see it, finally, but I've temporarily removed the image till we've sorted it out completely. This is a big step in the right direction, in that dotting/shading etc is precisely what I requested; but a quick look at other maps of India, such as on this site, will show you that the current map on this page has an odd angular distortion, ie the state of J&K looks like it was drawn from the side (maybe the map from which the J&K was copied was using a diff. projection from this one), so it is not geographically accurate, though it is a lot more politically correct.

Now, any way to correct this distortion? Does the copyright allow some image editing? And if we want to use the general outlines of this map to replace all other offending maps from now on, how does one go about it - search up every possible page with an India map on it and paste over the image source? Not very clear about that. A policy informing new Wikipedians about uploading India maps would also be nice. -- Simonides 13:34, 6 Oct 2004 (UTC)

Protection
I agree that the page should now be unprotected. As a sysop I have the power, but not the moral right, to do that, as I myself have been quite involved with this page as of late. As I wrote almost half of the text, I don't think it would be right for to exercise sysop powers here, at least not without consensus. If another sysop is willing to unprotect the page, that would be very much appreciated. I hope Simonides is happy with the new map. David Cannon 10:13, 4 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * It's not a matter of moral rights, it's part of Wikipedia policy that interested sysops cannot edit protected pages. For a sysop you don't seem to understand how Wikipedia works very well - yesterday you absurdly threatened an Arbcom decision, which is a last resort for decisions on repeat offenders ... why not spend some time reading up Wikipedia rules instead of trying hard to throw your weight around? -- Simonides 23:18, 4 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * I agree with you here, and I apologise for having spoken so sharply yesterday. Frankly, I was offended by the way you spoke so discourteously to other users, and for the way you (a) kept the map but (b) with text calling it "inaccurate."  What encyclopedia in the world would publish something, and call it inaccurate?  Also I felt your "Wikipedia says so" argument was shallow.  Everything on Wikipedia is written by people like you and me.  There is no reason why the information you found on Wikipedia is any more (or less) accurate than anything that you or I could write.  We need some authoritative external source.  Having said all that, I agree with your comments in the last paragraph.  I'm sorry I overreacted yesterday.  I think I expressed myself poorly: When I talked about "moral rights" I MEANT exactly what you said - that for interested sysops to edit protected pages violates policy - therefore I don't have a moral right to touch the page while it's protected.  I haven't, and I won't.  Now, let's (a) bury the hatchet, and (b) find some authoritative external source, and (c) correct the article accordingly. David Cannon 11:33, 5 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * It's hardly out of line to be "discourteous" when people are repeatedly acting out of ignorance and refuse to discuss their objections when asked to do so. Thanks for the apology anyway; as for "authoritative external sources", it should be obvious that this is a politically sensitive issue and you can never find an authoritative/ objective enough source, but if the infoplease site above, a map provided by the Kashmir Study group and the UN map of the region (large PDF file) are good enough for you, feel free to peek into them. -- Simonides 13:34, 6 Oct 2004 (UTC)

India maps
If we're going to discuss how to deal with Kashmir on Indian maps, this is the wrong place, as it has nothing particularly to do with Nagaland. Simonides seems to try to use this obscure place to get his way by stealth, while others who would be interested in the Kashmir question don't see it. Unless this is discussed - and a consensus to change the maps (i.e. all Indian maps) reached - on an appropriate place, I will revert this article. Gzornenplatz 19:26, Oct 6, 2004 (UTC)


 * There is no "wrong" or "right" place to start discussing changes on Wikipedia - but if protocol is all-important to you, a discussion about India maps has been going on at the Village pump policy section for about two days now, which you obviously don't know about, or at least never contributed to. The Nagaland map was changed not because it was in an "obscure" article but because this article was on the In the News template for about 2 days, which is how other India maps on Wikipedia came to my attention. If you can't act with some maturity here and all your other objections, like the last two, amount to bluster, then I'd be happy to repeat the cliche about people in glass houses; in the meanwhile please debate the change on the Policy page, if you have anything worthwhile to say on the matter at all, and please refrain from hopping around on your keyboard. -- Simonides 19:59, 6 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * Let me know when you're ready for civilized discussion. Until then I will revert your POV pushing here. I'm glad to talk to anyone else who wants to discuss this issue without throwing insults. Gzornenplatz 21:42, Oct 6, 2004 (UTC)


 * I am not in sympathy with the removal of the map. ALL articles pertaining to states of India have that map, and I believe that the Nagaland article should conform to the default "states of India" model.  Moreover, Wikipedia is supposed to be NPOV.  With respect to international boundaries, de facto reality (i.e. the territory actually controlled by a particular country) is the best NPOV position we can come up with.  Where the boundary SHOULD be is POV.  Where the boundary is actually CLAIMED to be by the respective parties is POV.  Where the "line of control" ACTUALLY IS is as close to NPOV as we can come. David Cannon 21:49, 6 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * Wrong. When an area is in dispute and has been in dispute for an extended period, it is NPOV not to judge for yourself what is the best/ default boundary to choose, but simply to indicate the dispute (which the current map does); besides, you seem to have a very superficial understanding of the situation - all three countries CLAIM they "actually" control the whole territory - merely because you are accustomed to seeing a map a certain way does not make it the correct one; Indians always see the whole of J&K on their national maps; Pakistanis see a version similar to what the CIA peddles (it's politically expeditious for the US to back Pakistani claims); the Chinese, I believe, have something similar, but not identical to the Pakistani or CIA map, but I may be wrong on the last count. Secondly, the map has not been removed permanently, but temporarily, until the little glitch I pointed out has been fixed - I thought Peter O. would fix it or at least suggest some fixes within an hour or two of removal but apparently he hasn't logged in yet today - we'll see - I certainly don't expect the image to be absent permanently, and once it is back it will hopefully serve as a model for the default state map and consequently, all the other incorrect India maps (using popularity is not an argument against replacement - a majority's belief in superstition doesn't elevate the superstition, etc.) -- Simonides 22:05, 6 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * Besides, what has the India-Pakistan boundary got to do with Nagaland? Nagaland is nowhere near the boundary/line of control/whatever you want to call it.  I personally am not to concerned about whether the map as a whole is 100 percent accurate, as long as it accurately shows Nagaland's position relative to the rest of India. What do you all think? David Cannon 21:49, 6 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * I agree. Also it would simply not be practical to explain the dispute on small locator maps. Just using different colours or shadings can't explain who claims what, and it's not worth including the necessary text on every such map. Gzornenplatz 21:58, Oct 6, 2004 (UTC)


 * It's the map of India that's on display, and the map is inaccurate, no matter what the map is being used for. You may not be personally concerned with the accuracy of the map but since Wiki is an encyclopedia our obligations are to a more diverse body of readers. As for removal of the "necessary text", that's not what I'm objecting to at all; as I've said more than once in the past day I'm happy with the political correctness of the current map, it simply needs to look more like the actual thing. -- Simonides 22:05, 6 Oct 2004 (UTC)

Unprotection and why
Howdy, folks. It's awful to see this much heat over an article, but I'm glad to see the temperature lowering a bit. If I understand the dispute correctly, the issue is over the map of India used by this and other India-related articles. I have no particular qualifications for knowing whether the often-used map is good or bad, but I hope that those who maintain that it is incorrect can find an alternative. I think that the people who have been wanting unprotection have not objected, essentially, to replacing the map they were using with another. I certainly agree that it is a very serious thing for us to have a bad map. For every map we use that shows too much India, a Pakhistani will be offended, and for every map that shows too little, an Indian will be. It seems to me that we would do well to have a map that indicates contested areas with a key that indicates such and that these areas be including in both national thumbnail maps. That's just an idea. In the meantime, I hope that Simonides will replace the bad map with a good one, and I will unprotect the article so that editing of text can go forward while better maps be found. Geogre 02:49, 7 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * Actually, the "people" who want unprotection (G-platz) earlier reverted a notice of inaccuracy and are now resisting a change of the map, though apparently not for any reason. As I tire of repeating, a discusson on a universal replacement of the India map HAS been ongoing for about three days at Village pump (policy). I don't mind the unprotection so long as a better image is found - I am working on it myself and have replaced the default States map at the India article - now if some editors would be good enough to join me in photoshopping/etc the maps for each article where it appears, colouring in the respective state/ indicating the city, and uploading the correct versions (it is quite a pain for me since I am abroad, on dial-up, and access is not cheap), I would much appreciate it. -- Simonides 14:07, 7 Oct 2004 (UTC)

Social science
topic: crops grown in nagaland ( Name of crops, their growing seasons , soil type , nutrients used for growth etc . Also paste pictures of crops . write for minimum 5 crops . ) 2409:4043:4E91:A940:53BD:88B0:F2AD:C6A4 (talk) 11:45, 10 January 2022 (UTC)

Assamese is also spoken in Nagaland.
Nagaland is now a state which was originally the state of Assam; i.e. Nagaland is a part of old Assam. Assamese is widely spoken in Nagaland; but why it is not mentioned in Wikipedia? 117.99.215.152 (talk) 18:53, 6 April 2022 (UTC)


 * Assamese is spoken by less than 1% of the population of Nagaland as per 2011 census. That's why it is not listed. - Fylindfotberserk (talk) 18:58, 6 April 2022 (UTC)

Social environment
.. 2409:4043:4E0D:811C:FEE9:B260:CFEC:B159 (talk) 09:35, 18 June 2022 (UTC)

Infobox replacement
The Infobox settlement used on this page is going to be replaced with Infobox Indian state or territory as per the Proposal and Consensus of RFC. Any questions/suggestions? Discuss Here.

You can also contribute by replacing Infobox settlement with Infobox Indian state or territory on other pages, or by improving this one. Tojoroy20 (talk) 18:51, 12 March 2023 (UTC)


 * ✅ Replaced — Tojoroy20 (talk) 21:09, 12 March 2023 (UTC)