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An editor has deleted all references to Harkis as Muslims. I have reverted the deletions because, until the end of French rule in 1962, Algeria was officially part of France and approximately one million Algerians were of European origin. The noun "Harki" is a generally accepted designation for (i) Muslims who served as auxiliaries with the French Army during the Algerian War and sometimes by extension (ii) those Muslims who supported French rule. The European pied-noirs served in separate auxiliary and regular units within the French forces and were never known as Harkis. To delete the adjective "Muslim" from this article serves no purpose except to confuse the history of this period. 192.188.71.2 05:21, 17 September 2007 (UTC)
If you want a reliable source for my claims of this subgroup of Harki, consult the 1979 Encyclopedia Britannica Micropaedia, it had a small description to the Evolvés of North Africa. But 5 percent of North Africans under French rule were Christian and they refused to "return" to the Islamic faith after independence.
Evolvés are sometimes included with the Harki by the Algerian government whom treated them lesser as political refugees without the right to return to Algeria, and the Evolvé are among the Algerian-French community, but are thrown into the primarily Muslim Harki because of their ethnic origins.
The Harki indicates not all Algerians were against France, nor they are entirely Muslim (although 90-95 percent of Algerians are) and you find a small porportion of Harkis or Evolvés were present in Metropolitian France for over a century (note the large North African communities of Marseille and Montpellier). + 71.102.53.48 ( talk) 17:26, 25 April 2008 (UTC)
Edited section "After the war". Deleted segment "have been held" for grammar
Original line "Recently, the French government of Jacques Chirac acknowledged these former allies, holding public ceremonies have been held to commemorate their sacrifices, such as the September 25, 2001 Day of National Recognition for the Harkis."
After edit "Recently, the French government of Jacques Chirac acknowledged these former allies, holding public ceremonies to commemorate their sacrifices, such as the September 25, 2001 Day of National Recognition for the Harkis."
Alternative edit "Recently, the French government of Jacques Chirac acknowledged these former allies. Public ceremonies have been held to commemorate their sacrifices, such as the September 25, 2001 Day of National Recognition for the Harkis."
Suggested edit "holding public ceremonies to commemorate their sacrifices such as the September 25, 2001 Day of National Recognition for the Harkis" — Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.121.133.149 ( talk) 13:49, 18 January 2015 (UTC)
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Hello M.Bitton. Just a message to advise that I intend to restore the material that you have deleted from this article. The reason is that the passages taken out have been contributed by a number of editors over a period of 15 years and are I think grammatically and stylistically superior to the large addition just made by an unnamed editor. Though I would acknowledge that much of the latter is well sourced.
My intention is to relocate passages, data and source references from the "new" sections into the original article where this does not mean duplication. The new material was simply too extensive and (to a certain extent) clumsily worded to be edited as a single exercise. Buistr ( talk) 08:58, 26 March 2023 (UTC)