WP:NOTMEMORIAL is frequently cited in discussions pertaining to victims of mass casualty events. This essay attempts to address some of the common misconceptions around this policy, explaining what NOTMEMORIAL is not.

What NOTMEMORIAL is[edit]

First, let's clear up the intention of NOTMEMORIAL as it is currently written:

4. Memorials. Subjects of encyclopedia articles must satisfy Wikipedia's notability requirements. Wikipedia is not the place to memorialize deceased friends, relatives, acquaintances, or others who do not meet such requirements. (WP:RIP is excluded from this rule.)

The intention is to disallow the creation of entire pages about deceased friends, relatives or acquaintances or other random people (even in user-space) if they do not meet the notability requirements for people. A carve-out for WP:RIP is the only exclusion.

What it is not[edit]

Let's take this policy a piece at a time.

NOTMEMORIAL is not a reason to exclude victims from an article on an event which covers their deaths. NOTMEMORIAL is not a reason to exclude details of who the victims are in an article on an event that covers their deaths. The relevant policies and guidelines are WP:NPOV (specifically, WP:UNDUE) and WP:NOTEWORTHY.

Title[edit]

It seems like many editors just see the shortcut (NOTMEMORIAL) and don't actually read what they're using to support their position. Unfortunately the page (Wikipedia:What Wikipedia is not) doesn't really provide a good way to rename these shortcuts without making them ridiculously long. But clearly people aren't reading the instructions, just the title.

Relevant RFC closures[edit]

See also[edit]