[6] Declared goals of the association (2004): The organization operates on the basis of the "Pagan Tradition Manifesto," repeatedly reprinted in Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, and Lithuania.
[8] Currently, within the "Slavic Native Belief" subculture, united by information infrastructure, reverence for common deities, rituals, and a sense of opposition to globalism, the CPG along with "Union of Slavic Native Belief Communities" (URC) is a movement that seeks to unite disparate communities and individual neo-pagans.
[9] In August 2008, after an act of vandalism at one of the temples, four associations, the "Union of Slavic Communities of Slavic Native Faith" (SSO SRV), "Circle of Pagan Tradition" (CPG), "Veles Circle" and "Schoron ezh Sloven" (Vladimir Golyakov - Bogumil II), began to come together by creating an Advisory Council of the four associations.
Moreover ... We consider it our duty to warn all supporters of Pagan worldview that when reading the books of the named authors they can be misled by the theories, disguised as science, which are set forth in the works of the mentioned persons.
[11][12][13]According to the religious scholar A. V. Gaidukov, this appeal is an attempt by some Rodnovers to protect themselves from radical manifestations of nationalism or "esoteric deviations.
[14] In December 2013, the SRV, Veles Circle, and CPG condemned the leader of the "Ukrainian religious sect" Rodovoye Ognische Slavyanskoe Rodnoi Vera, Vladimir Kurovsky.
[12] On August 27, 2016 in Kolomenskoye (Moscow) there was a meeting of eighteen wise men and priests - representatives of several neo-pagan associations - Slavic, "Hellenic", North German, and followers of "European Witchcraft".
Represented at the meeting were: "Pagan Federation International" (PFI), SRV SSO, CPG, "Veles Circle", "Moscow House Wiccan", the Olympic Religious League "Liberation of Mind", the almanac "Saga" ("project of the Union of Free Asatru"), the "Assembly of Slavic communities Native Land".
It is proposed "to create a Commonwealth of associations (followers of the Natural Faith) in Russia, Belarus and other countries, united by a common historical and cultural space".