Maybe they should just accept, that there traditions are gone, white people killed off their 'earth-based' traditions, did not allow any lineages to survive, and no such communities or lineages of Elders truly survive to this day.
I think you're painting with too broad a brush here. I've posted on here a lot about how we do have surviving cultural traditions, if one is willing to take the cultures on their own terms, learn the language and music, etc. Around the turn of the last century in Scotland, and a bit later in Ireland, massive projects were undertaken to interview elders before they died and took a ton of cultural wealth with them. We have many recordings of songs and stories. These are the things that existed *alongside* Christianity. We know less about what was truly pre-Christian, as those were writings by the Romans, but when those accounts line up with the survivals, some pretty solid things can be, and have been, pieced together.
I understand your anger, as I've dealt with the eclectics and fantasists denigrating my ancestors and the surviving ways for my whole life. I deal with it every day. But I also feel like you're playing pretty fast and loose here.
One cannot even call a scholar or reconstructionist a true pagan. There are plenty of douchebags who have learned Gaelic fluently as they can, have studied anthropolological writing and folklore extensively, yet they still steal from other traditions and declare it's ok
I'm not exactly sure what you're point is here. Real reconstructionists are firmly opposed to eclecticism and cultural appropriation. But we have no control over what people call themselves. The same people who misappropriate from, and misrepresent, NDNs also misappropriate from the ethnic cultures I am part of.
"Pagan" isn't the best word for what we do as it's been so tainted by the appropriators, nuagers, etc. But by the technical definition (from the Roman "
pagani" - of the countryside - the people who held to rural "superstitions" after Christianity came to the cities) any of us doing earth-based traditions can be called that. It's not my preferred term, but it's not *technically* all that inaccurate.
With our struggle for language survival, and as language is the heart of a culture, I would never call someone who has made the effort to become fluent in Gaelic and help preserve and pass on the language a "douchebag."
The people who are
misusing the word "reconstructionist" when they are actually just eclectics and fantasists are a big problem, but those are not the people who are learning the languages and learning from the elders who are native speakers, storytellers and musicians. We do have elders of a sort. It's not as structured or solid as the thriving NDN communities on this continent, but it's pretty comparable to the communities who had early contact, who have had to fight to keep and revitalize their language, and who still have some simple ceremonies but few things that are as huge and elaborate as some of the surviving ways of the people who were invaded much later.
I've said all of this up-thread, though, so I'm not sure why we have to go over this again.
Yes, people should be incredibly skeptical. And there are plenty of fantasists and liars who have tried to confuse the terminology. But until you're more familiar with the field, I'd respectfully ask you to avoid tarring everyone with the same brush until you know more about what does and doesn't survive.