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Hello everyone, I and a few others are working on a complete re-write of this page to include the following section: Legal description, The House of Netjer, Membership, Beliefs, Kemetic Orthodoxy and other religions, History, and Criticism. This re-write will also increase the number of links and references. If anyone wishes to help with this, or to make sure that certain statements are made, let me know.
IanCheesman (
talk)
19:19, 25 February 2008 (UTC)reply
Well, here it is folks, hope it is better than it was. Obviously, anyone who wishes to help make it even better, your help is more than welcome.
IanCheesman (
talk)
06:02, 11 April 2008 (UTC)reply
Notability
There seems to be one individual who believes this wiki violates the notability clauses. If someone can help me figure out how, I would be more than happy to make changes to the article to help.
IanCheesman (
talk)
20:19, 15 April 2008 (UTC)reply
How is this notable enough for an article? It appears to be a religion started by one woman, who appointed herself as pharoah. All the sources are links to the religion's own site, and there isn't even a number of followers listed, although other sources I've come across put followers at less than 500... I would imagine there are literally tens of thousands of religious movements of this size worldwide... —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
170.201.180.137 (
talk)
15:45, 16 July 2008 (UTC)reply
Welcome. Notability is always a hard topic to handle. While I agree the number of practitioners of Kemetic Orthodoxy is small compared to some religions, I think it is notable for a number of reasons. Perhaps the best reason is its uniqueness. There are very few groups out there like this one, almost all of which are much smaller (on the scale of 1/10 the size). In addition, a number of those smaller groups were created by breaking off of Kemetic Orthodoxy over the years. If size of a group is the only determining factor of importance, then almost all of the band, sports teams, etc. pages would have to disappear too. As for the founder of the religion, that too is a touchy subject, as almost every religion in existence was created by just one person who claimed a title of some kind.
As for the links, while many do link back to websites owned and operated by the religion, many others link to other sites and books. The links point where they do because most of the time the religion was found to be the best source on the topic. Part of this is simply because they know themselves the best, and partially because they haven't been around for a long time compared to many other religions.
well, almost a month later and receiving no further info back from the unknown commenter, I have removed the notability tag. I reread through everything I could find on the topic of notability on wikipedia, and feel this is the right move. If anyone else has any other comments, please feel free to make them.
IanCheesman (
talk)
18:10, 9 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Neopagan vs. African Traditional
With the content changed to African Traditional, I have removed the categories and all other major links to dealing with Neopagan religion, including the ratings info (both here and on the Neopagan assessment page). Unfortunately there is no African Traditional group similar to the Neopagan assessment group, so we will be limited to the assesments from the Egypt and Religion groups (neither of whom have looked at this page yet).
IanCheesman (
talk)
18:10, 9 August 2008 (UTC)reply
I've added some additional tags to the article. All of which are relevant and accurate, to my eyes. A majority of the contributions to the article have been added by proponents and practitioners of Kemetic Orthodoxy. Which is fine, but it's unfortunately resulted in an article that in unbalanced, intricate, overly promotional, and heavily reliant on primary sources. I'm not sure who's watching this page, but I'd love to have some collaboration on doing an extensive rewrite of this article. It is a notable subject, but the article as it is hardly conforms to Wikipedia policy. Anyone game?
Quinto Simmaco (
talk)
09:29, 15 March 2015 (UTC)reply
I have reworded some of the article in order to give it a more neutral and detached tone. There are however some changes I have made which may be contentious:
The religion was previously defined as
Polytheistic reconstructionism, however by the definition listed here it deviates from the historical understanding of the
Ancient Egyptian religion, therefore is not true reconstructionism.
Material from the House of Netjer site and affiliated sources state that the religion preaches the existence of one "Supreme God" represented using several "Names". The same sources claim that this is an example of
Monolatry, however this is incorrect, and the above definition fits the description of an
Inclusive monotheism. I have chosen to defer to their description of the religion, rather than the term they use, as there are no secondary sources discussing this.
There was a claim that the requirement that their members respect one another is an example of
"reconstructionism", which is uncitable.