Modern Druidism
Although druidry isn't about to overtake other orders as the main one, all things considered, it has shown incredible durability. 33,000 people who identified as Druids were found in a sample of 200 million responses conducted in 2001 by the American Religious Identification Survey. There were 10,000 practicing Druids, according to research published in 2010 to coincide with Druidry's official recognition as a religion, and that number was rising along with environmental awareness. There are around 3,000 members of the Ancient Order of Druids among them.
It should come as no surprise that these orders engage in a variety of activities. Some of them, like the Ancient Order of Druids and Reformed Druids of North America, have evolved into nonprofit groups with missions to advance environmental awareness, community art initiatives, and mindfulness.
Others, like the Welsh order known as the Rainbow People, have avoided speaking to the media entirely because Druidry is still a fringe belief, which makes them a target for abuse. None of the orders have made any efforts to bring back human sacrifice at this point. The reader will have to judge whether or not that is a letdown.