I've read much of this forum, not all of it because Gods it goes back a long time, so I do apologise if this has been raised before.
We had some discussion of it in this thread, which started before I was an active poster here:
http://www.newagefraud.org/smf/index.php?topic=190.0 As you see, it got weird. Most of the people in that thread don't participate here anymore, and some seemed to only drop in to argue in that one thread. I could be wrong, but I think most of the people on the forum who currently, actively identify as "Pagan" are new members.
I used to identify as a Pagan, but for many, many reasons no longer do. Some of my views have evolved since I posted in that thread three years ago.
I don't call myself "pagan" because the word is not a description of what you are but what you are not.
Yeah, the word has its roots in Latin (from Latin
paganus, meaning "country dweller", "rustic"), and the Irish and Scottish Gaelic versions are Gaelicised loan-words (
Págánacht agus Pàganachd). Neo-Pagans have tried to reclaim "Pagan" on that basis (of the earth, not Christianised like the city people), with mixed results.
I'm Irish, I practice a personal path that venerates ancestors and worships house Gods and a pantheon of other Gods and when asked what my religion is (which frequently happens because of my tattoos), I respond with "I am a Gael". This is not actually a valid answer, linguistically. I have been asked my religion and reply with my ethnicity, but at least it describes what I am.
Yes, Ancestors, Deities and Spirits of the Land. Prayers and songs in Gàidhlig or Gaeilge or Old Irish, keeping things as traditional as possible based on cultural survivals, and carefully reconstructing based on written records when we only have scant survivals or bare mentions of a practice that has been fragmented or lost. I usually say Gaelic Polytheist, or more specific tradition names in Gàidhlig.
The thought among a number of my friends and colleagues a few years ago was to keep
some ties to the modern Pagan community by referring to our traditions as
Pàganachd or
Págánacht (or
Págántacht). I now regret having gone with that consensus, as I am really appalled at the degree of racism, cultural misappropriation, and fantasy/confabulation/lies that are accepted as the norm in that community. There are people who post online about being against cultural misappropriation who will then happily participate in a festival that has newage sweats and other ripped off and mangled indigenous ceremonies. Much to my horror, I recently saw some pictures from a thoroughly non-NDN Pagan festival that had always seemed "off" to me and they had built an approximation of a Sun Dance arbor.