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	<title>Dorje Shugden and Dalai Lama - Spreading Dharma Together &#187; shugden society</title>
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	<description>The Protector whose time has come</description>
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		<title>It&#8217;s the Dalai Lama vs Shugden</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 27 May 2011 19:06:09 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Controversy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dalai Lama]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gelugpa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[geshe kelsang gyatso]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[The ongoing temporal struggle between the Dalai Lama as head of the Gelugpa sect and the Britain-based Shugden community is part of a tradition that goes back to power plays between spiritual leaders in old Tibet. This time, Western followers of various forms of Tibetan Buddhism are adding fuel to the flames. ~ by Deepak...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="aligncenter" src="/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/8268-1.jpg" alt="" width="460" /><q>The ongoing temporal struggle between the Dalai Lama as head of the Gelugpa sect and the Britain-based Shugden community is part of a tradition that goes back to power plays between spiritual leaders in old Tibet. This time, Western followers of various forms of Tibetan Buddhism are adding fuel to the flames.</q><span class="source"> ~ by Deepak Thapa</span></p>
<p>In late spring 1996, the world-wide Tibetan community received a rude jolt when a hitherto-unknown London-based group called the Shugden Supporters Community (SSC) sent out press releases and staged demonstrations outside the Office of Tibet in London protesting the “religious persecution by the Dalai Lama”. The SSC contended that since the Dalai Lama’s injunction earlier this year against the worship of the deity known as Dorje Shugden, propitiators of that god have systematically been eased out of Tibetan government-in-exile jobs and schools and have been denied humanitarian assistance.</p>
<p>The SSC has gone much further than charge the Dalai Lama of “suppressing the individual right to make religious choices”. The religious as well as temporal head of the Tibetans, otherwise enjoying unquestioned popularity for his personal likeability and the Tibetan cause he represents, has been called an “oppressor” and a “ruthless dictator”.</p>
<p>Tenzin Gyatso, which is the Dalai Lama&#8217;s name, has also been condemned as having plans to return to Tibet as a Chinese puppet. The SSC press statement says that “Over the years in power he (the Dalai Lama) has manipulated the Tibetan people, using both emotional and spiritual blackmail into adopting the political and religious systems that he himself favours and abandoning those that he does not.” Even the Dalai Lama’s geniality was not spared. During the London demonstrations some placards read, “Your smiles charm, your actions harm”.</p>
<p>If it was publicity the SSC were after, they got more than their share of it. While the British press initially received their activities coolly, after the BBC World Service covered one of their demonstrations, newspapers in Britain and India promptly picked up the news, creating a flutter among Tibetan Buddhists (who now consist of both Tibetans and Westerners) everywhere. Within the next few days, practically all the major Indian papers had carried news reports on the Dalai Lama’s “religious persecution”. It was not at all comfortable to have such accounts appear in the host country’s press, and the Dalai Lama’s administration in Dharamshala in Himachal Pradesh found itself on the defensive. Statements were issued, and denials made but the damage, to whatever extent, had been done.</p>
<p>There might have been no story if the advice the Dalai Lama did give regarding non- worship of Shugden had not been taken up too zealously by some Tibetans. Taking the cue from the Dalai Lama’s statement that those who worship Shugden should best dissociate from him, some enthusiastic followers including those in the Tibetan Youth Congress are said to have gone around monasteries in India demanding that monks pledge loyalty to the Dalai Lama. That provided the spice — of the Dalai Lama as villain — which was just too good to be passed up by the press. It is an altogether different matter that behind the Dalai Lama’s stance and the opposition to him lies the complex nature of Tibet’s political legacy from which religion was, and still is, inseparable.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2>Power Struggles</h2>
<p>Buddhism in Tibet is a continuous history of power struggles. It was fostered mainly by the evolution of the religion into different schools of teachings with each claiming superiority over the others. Religious differences inevitably led to a struggle for political leadership, to the extent that the ascendance of the sects became entirely dependent on their standing on the temporal plane.</p>
<p>The power struggle ended after the Gelugpa sect (to which the Dalai Lama belongs) established unchallenged authority over Tibet around AD 1640. But the bad blood between the sects had already taken strong root, and bitterness against the Gelugpa grew as they consolidated their hold over the country.</p>
<p>Different sects had pockets of influence spread out over the country, spatially and spiritually far removed from Lhasa. The Gelugpa centre continually strove for total control over these areas and in doing so tried to undermine the three other major sects, the Kargyupa, the Nyingmapa and the Sakyapa. Pillaging other monasteries and turning them into Gelugpa was a common practice.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="aligncenter" src="/images/dalai-lama-1959.jpg" alt="Dalai Lama 1959" width="460" /></p>
<p>After the Dalai Lama’s flight to India in 1959, the tussle was carried on in exile in India and Nepal, although the world at large was generally unaware of the sectarian rifts, as its attention was focused only on the Dalai Lama and his cause. Strong accusations have been made, particularly by the Karmapa (a branch of the Kargyupa), against Dharamshala regarding partiality towards Gelugpa in disbursement of internationally received humanitarian assistance. Equally resented has been the Gelugpa proselytising that has gone hand-in- hand with aid distribution. There have also been reports of dissidents being assassinated. And, if anything, the large amounts of income involved in the spread of Tibetan Buddhism in the fertile ground of the West seems to have only increased the potential for confrontation.</p>
<p>The present Shugden controversy is a legacy of this history of sectarian confrontation within and outside Tibet.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2>Demons and Oracles</h2>
<p>One of the distinctive characteristics of Tibetan Buddhism is the existence of a large number of demons and oracles among its pantheon of divinities. Most of these deities have their origins in the shamanistic Bon religion that held sway in Tibet before the advent of Buddhism, and their incorporation into the Buddhist pantheon was but a ploy used by the clever Indian tantric-sage, Padmasambhava, in the 8th century, to keep the Buddhist flag flying in Tibet.</p>
<p>Besides his contribution in regenerating the new faith that had been introduced just a hundred years before he arrived in Tibet, Padmasambhava, or Guru Rinpoche (Precious Teacher) for Tibetans, also introduced shamanism into Tibetan Buddhism. Since his time, many more gods have been included into the Buddhist fold in Tibet following the same shamanistic tradition. One such deity is Dorje Shugden, which entered the pantheon in the seventeenth century as a Gelugpa god.</p>
<p>Shugden is one of the gods known as the dabla (enemy-defeating gods). The dabla are known to be very scrupulous in protecting their followers against enemies and very generous in bestowing wealth on their devotees. Among the dabla, Shugden is considered to be very quick in acceding to requests — one reason which explains its popularity.</p>
<p>But even though Shugden worship may be more rewarding, it is said to be very difficult to follow because it involves praying and meditating every day for the rest of one’s life. And while Shugden is quick to respond to supplications, so is it in punishing those who deviate from its path.</p>
<p>Tibetans of all orders, in general, are afraid of Shugden’s anger and shy away even from taking its name. The Dalai Lama himself is most careful when talking about Shugden. “&#8230;I specifically mentioned Dolgyal (Shugden) by name and an incantation was made to ward him off”, is what he said in one of his addresses.</p>
<p>While urging that the god not be worshipped he also reassures his followers that they need not fear “that they will be harmed if they stop propitiating Dolgyal. Nothing will happen and I will face the challenge. As Gelugpas, recite the migtse ma prayer, it will be enough if you also recite the Choegyal Gyi Poepa Kyangkumma. No harm will befall you.”</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2>Fundamentalists</h2>
<p>The Dalai Lama’s stance over Shugden can be traced to the origins of his order. When in the fourteenth century the monk Tsongkhapa founded Gelugpa, it was also a reaction against the many shamanistic rituals that had crept into the other sects. Tsongkhapa advocated a purer form of Buddhism, but custom could not be easily ignored and many different deities became part and parcel of the Gelugpa tradition too. The present Dalai Lama (he is the fourteenth) is also considered to be a purist in a fashion after Tsongkhapa and it is in keeping with his general view that he has been discouraging the propitiation of all spirits, Shugden included.</p>
<p>The Dalai Lamas, in their position as leaders of all of Tibet, are initiated into various lineages of other schools of Tibetan Buddhism and have been known to be of generally liberal outlook. The present Dalai Lama is known to be even more broad-minded, with a world vision that few of his predecessors had. During his early days in Lhasa, he was introduced to Western thought by the British residents of the time as well as by Heinrich Harrer (author of Seven Years in Tibet) and was influenced by what he learnt then. What cannot also be discounted is his life in exile where his dealings have been with secular world leaders of the 20th century. It was he who even included the ancient Bon religion, despite its initial antagonism to Buddhism, into the Buddhist fold in the eighties.</p>
<p>However, at the same time, it is not just theological liberalism on the Dalai Lama’s part that he has come out so strongly against a deity that is very much part of his own school of Tibetan Buddhism. He is also making a political statement. In the Tibet of old, Shugden was often invoked in the Gelugpa’s conflict against the Nyingmapa. (The Kargyupa and the Sakyapa, having accepted Shugden as their own, are spared its wrath.)</p>
<p>This practice might not have seemed unacceptable in Tibet’s long and fractious history. But, when Gelugpa fundamentalists employ the method even today to make their own kind of Buddhism strong vis-a-vis the others, the danger of a rift among the Tibetan people becomes all too real.</p>
<p>The Dalai Lama has consistently tried to take all the branches along in his struggle for Tibetan independence. “The Dalai Lama is very good at papering cracks,” says Keith Dowman, Nyingmapa scholar and author of Power Places of Tibet. “And he naturally is upset when his hard work is set to be undone.”</p>
<p>The Dalai Lama said in one of his recent talks: “I have conducted a number of prayers for the well-being of our nation and religion. It has become fairly clear that Dolgyal (Shugden) is a spirit of the dark forces&#8230;. When the protector concerned is disloyal to its commitments, the person concerned becomes disloyal in turn&#8230;.(The restriction on Shugden) is in the interest of the Tibetan nation and its religion.”</p>
<p>Although the Dalai Lama made a break from Shugden almost two decades ago, it is only this year that his exile administration issued a prohibition on the worship of the spirit. A circular was sent from his Private Office which said, among other things, “&#8230;it is unforgivable of anyone to engage in undermining the harmony of Tibetan society&#8230;” Following his ban, the Chamber of Tibetan People’s Deputies also passed a resolution stating “&#8230;the departments, their branches and subsidiaries, monasteries and their branches that are functioning under the administrative control of the Tibetan Government-in-Exile should be strictly instructed in accordance with the rules and regulations not to indulge in the propitiation of Dolgyal (Shugden).”</p>
<div class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 460px"><img src="/images/geshe-kelsang-gyatso-writing.jpg" alt="geshe kelsang gyatso" width="460" />
<p class="wp-caption-text">Geshe Kelsang Gyatso</p>
</div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2>Fastest-Growing Sect</h2>
<p>It was this ban that led to the formation of the Shugden Supporters Community (SSC) in England. The SSC is associated with the New Kadampa Tradition (NKT), a sect founded by a Tibetan Buddhist monk named Geshe Kelsang Gyatso. The Geshe (a title equivalent to a doctorate in Tibetan Buddhism) came to England in 1977 from India and after having earned a name as a writer and teacher of Buddhism, established the NKT in 1991. It is now the fastest-growing Buddhist sect in England.</p>
<p>The NKT centres are conspicuous by their being devoid of any portrait of the Dalai Lama, otherwise a ubiquitous fixture in Tibetan establishments all over. (The Chinese authorities have recently started to rid all Tibet of the portraits.) These centres are not under the control of the Tibetan administration in Dharamshala and neither do they have to follow the Dalai Lama’s instructions, on Shugden or anything else. This is why the NKT/SSC&#8217;s taking issue with the Dalai Lama over his ban is all the more inexplicable.</p>
<p>But Geshe Kelsang has his reasons. “The practice of Shugden came from generation to generation,” he told The Independent of London. “There is so much joy in the daily practice; and the Dalai Lama suddenly says this is bad, this is harmful. The Dalai Lama is not an ordinary being, and when he said this, everybody was shocked. They experienced mental pain. If Dalai Lama is right, then up to now, this practice we have done for 20 years, everything wasted: time lost, money lost, everything lost. That is the big issue.”</p>
<p>The Dalai Lama and Geshe Kelsang have come a long way since the time they studied under the same teacher, Trijang Rinpoche, in their younger days. Nowadays, even expressing admiration for the Dalai Lama is enough to be thrown out of the NKT. But the mutual regard they once shared is obvious from the fact that the Dalai Lama used to write forewords to Geshe Kelsang’s books and in one of which he noted: “&#8230;Geshe Kelsang Gyatso has attempted to present the basic teachings of Lord Buddha in a manner that people can relate to and put them into practice in their daily lives.”</p>
<p>While criticising the Dalai Lama’s actions, the NKT says it was Trijang Rinpoche who widely propagated the worship of Shugden and emphasised its importance.</p>
<p>The Dalai Lama does not deny following the worship earlier, but he says his tutor, who died in 1981, had acknowledged and approved his findings that propitiating Shugden could only harm the Tibetan nation.</p>
<p><span class="highlight">Editor’s Note – The Dalai Lama’s claim regarding Trijang Rinpoche approval of the Dalai Lama’s finding that the practice of Dorje Shugden harms the Tibetan nation is unsubstantiated. In Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche’s text ‘MUSIC DELIGHTING THE OCEAN OF PROTECTORS’, the information and tone of this piece of work clearly shows how much faith Trijang Rinpoche has for the protector Dorje Shugden and the benefits of propitiating Dorje Shugden.</p>
<p>Though the Gelug tradition has many high lamas, Kyabjye Trijang Rinpoche certainly ranks amongst the highest practitioner and scholar of the Gelugpa tradition.</span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2>Tantric Rituals</h2>
<p>The New Kadampa Tradition, takes its name from the Kadampa order, considered to be the precursor to the Gelugpa. It is ironic that although the Kadampa tradition was founded as a move away from tantric rituals towards a more serious study of religion, its modern namesake emphasises the worship of Shugden, a divine manifestation, but nevertheless of tantric origin. The NKT holds that Shugden is a Buddha (having achieved nirvana), a belief that is not shared by others, including the Dalai Lama.</p>
<p>However, when viewed in the context of the politics within the Gelugpa itself, Shugden is nothing more than a peripheral issue, which provided a plank for attacking the Dalai Lama. Tenzin Gyatso and his ecumenical views are not popular with certain sections among the Gelugpa, who believe that the purity ofthe Gelugpa teachings is being destroyed by the other sects and they would want to stop at nothing to preserve what they believe is a superior tradition. That is one reason why the name Geshe Kelsang chose for his school is particularly significant. By calling it the New Kadampa Tradition, he is seeking to revert to a “purer” form of the Gelugpa, going back to a time even before the Dalai Lama lineage was established. It seems that these conservatives of the NKT mold are concerned solely with their dominance over other sects and are not at all keen about the Dalai Lama’s all-embracing ideals.</p>
<p>In fact, an NKT spokesman is on record as having said that hatred for the Nyingmapa is taught at NKT, for the school firmly believes that there is a Nyingmapa conspiracy to corrupt Gelugpa teachings.</p>
<p><span class="highlight">Editor’s Note – The practice of Buddhism is to move away from the dualism of attachment and aversion. To have any form of hatred is against the core of Buddhism and is a hindrance on our spiritual progress.</span></p>
<p>It neither helps the Dalai Lama in his efforts to unite the Tibetans that counterparts of such conservatives are to be found among other sects too. Until this year, before the ban was issued, the Dalai Lama’s statements against Shugden worship were construed by most to apply only to public practice and many Gelugpa monks continued propitiating the god in private. This was made an issue of by the Dalai Lama’s critics who pointed out that his pronouncements were only meant to be a sop to Nyingmapas and that he secretly encouraged worship of Shugden in private.</p>
<p>These critics have been effectively silenced by the resolute stand he has taken now, but in doing so, the Dalai Lama is putting a lot at stake. He is likely to alienate many among his own fold and split the Gelugpa between the modernists and the traditionalists. However, two developments that took place recently should strengthen his position considerably. Ganden Lama, the head of the Gelugpa (the Dalai Lama does not hold an official post within its hierarchy) has issued a statement that worship of Shugden should be stopped.</p>
<p><span class="highlight">Editor’s Note – The head of Gelugpa is the Gaden Tripa.</span></p>
<p>At the same time, the college of Sera monastery which Geshe Kelsang belonged to has publicly expelled him from its membership.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2>Foot Soldiers</h2>
<p>For the moment, Geshe Kelsang is not likely to be bothered by these developments in the Indian and Tibetan worlds he has left behind. He has created a space of his own in the West, where he is supreme. He is known to tell his followers that he believes Buddhism in Tibet is dead because of the Chinese occupation and that it has already died in the exile community in India. He makes it known that it is the West where the future of Buddhism lies and that it is going to be no other than Geshe Kelsang himself who is going to herald that future. It is no wonder that NKT claims Geshe Kelsang to be the first teacher to adapt Buddhism to Westerners’ needs.</p>
<p>The fascination of NKT members is complete. “He is absolutely amazing. He’s our spiritual guide. I’ve never met anyone who works so hard to spread Buddhist teaching in the West and to help overcome everyday Western problems. His whole life is dedicated to helping other people,” gushed one to The Guardian of London.</p>
<p>Blinkered as they are by their veneration of their teacher, some of their extremist arguments border on the ludicrous. For instance, the SSC says that the Dalai Lama’s stricture has affected four million Shugden worshippers. The entire Tibetan population in the world is around six million. Gelugpas number less than half of this and even among the Gelugpas only a tiny minority is initiated into Shugden worship. At most, according to experts, there are 100,000 people practising Shugden worship.</p>
<p>The SSC’s refusal to appreciate the Dalai Lama’s position in relation to the larger question of religious goodwill is in some ways understandable. The SSC is composed almost entirely of British Buddhists and they bring into their religion of choice a flavour of their religion of birth and upbringing. Explains Robbie Barnett of Tibet Information Network in London: “The inability of Western students to assess the significance or proportionality of this issue, or of any issue, is closely linked to a tradition of extreme literalism that is fostered by some forms of Protestant culture, as for example among fundamentalist evangelicals. These Westerners in the NKT take their teacher literally as a Buddha and apparently have absolute obedience to his beliefs. So the particular problem here is that a Tibetan ultra-traditionalist has found a number of like-minded Westerners, with a literalist view of religion almost certainly learnt from the Protestant tradition.”</p>
<p>This indicates a larger dilemma for the Tibetans involved in propagating the faith: the financial and political support provided by Western supporters is important to the Tibetan cause, but at the same time it takes the religion beyond the control of the Tibetans themselves. If left on their own, there was a chance that the Tibetans could have resolved the Shugden dispute using their own traditional forms of conflict resolution which may not necessarily be the fairest of means. But, since some Tibetan Buddhist Westerners are in the front ranks of the controversy, it is being given the Western treatment which includes involvement of the press. “The transferring of this debate to the mass media has made the issue more extreme, sensational, confrontational and intractable,” says Mr Barnett.</p>
<p>Confrontational is indeed what the ongoing internet war over Shugden has been. While some Shugden supporters are known to be using Tibetan pseudonyms to give the impression of having Tibetan support, the anonymity of nom de plumes is also being used to make malicious personal attacks. The same anonymity is leading to all sorts of officious-sounding postings being put up in the internet under names like, of all things, Sammy Padmasambhava.</p>
<p>In the computerised war of words, those supporting the Dalai Lama try to place the debate within Tibet’s history of religious antagonism, while their opponents go on about the old tradition of Shugden culture in the Gelugpa, the Dalai Lama’s earlier practice of Shugden, the Nyingmapa threat and, of course, the issue of individual freedom.</p>
<p>Perhaps what the Shugden supporters in the SSC or the NKT refuse to realise is that they have become very handy pawns in the Gelugpa conflict. The stature of the Dalai Lama is such that an all-out frontal attack on his benevolence towards other sects would most likely backfire. Hence, the use of Western foot soldiers bearing the standard of human rights. The disgruntled fundamentalists within the Gelugpa may have made their point but differences that are essentially religious have weakened the Dalai Lama politically.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2>Leave It to Tibetans</h2>
<p>The Dalai Lama sees it as his responsibility to prepare all Tibetans for the modern world, which implies unity under a nation-state or some form of acceptable autonomy. He also realises that his personality alone cannot carry his people through, especially given his belief that he is probably the last Dalai Lama.</p>
<p>“The Dalai Lama is trying to modernise the Tibetans’ political vision and trying to undermine the factionalism. He has the dilemma of the liberal—do you tolerate the intolerant?” This is how Paul Williams, Reader in Indo-Tibetan Studies at Bristol University, summed up the problem for the Dalai Lama ever since he first spoke publicly against Shugden in 1978.</p>
<p>The Shugden controversy has also been an eye-opener for non-Tibetan Buddhists. While Tibetan Buddhism with its whole new philosophical view of the world, and no doubt its exotic pristineness, was generally perceived by many to be the answer to the “spiritual bankruptcy” of the West, the spotlight it has been put under has eroded some of the sheen. “Finally, it seems that Tibetans, monks and all, will also be taken to be what they are. Ordinary human beings, with their ordinary quarrels over the standard issues of political power,” says a Western adherent of Tibetan Buddhism.</p>
<p>This is not the first time, and nor is it likely to be the last, that Western believers, with far too little understanding of the religion than their clout demands, have created disputes where none existed or have blown matters out of proportion. A fresh memory is of the controversial demands made by Western devotees in 1992 for more &#8220;openness&#8221; during the selection of the 17th Gyalwa Karmapa, the head of the Kargyupa.</p>
<p>A sentiment Tibetans in exile have begun to express has been put very well by Karma Gyaltsen, president of the Capital Area Tibetan Association, Washington DC, when he pleaded with the SSC: “We are pleased that you are concerned about the future of Tibet. But, as Tibetans, we would like to state categorically, leave it to the Tibetan people to decide what sort of future we want. You do not have to impose your views on us. The Tibetan people need international support. What we do not need is action of people like yourselves who try to think that they know more about Tibet than us the Tibetan people.”</p>
<p><span class="source">(Source : <a href="http://ebookbrowse.com/it-s-the-dalai-lama-vs-shugden-pdf-d123886245" target="_blank">http://ebookbrowse.com/it-s-the-dalai-lama-vs-shugden-pdf-d123886245</a>)</span></p>
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		<title>Defamatory Accusations of Murder Repeated Over and Over Again for Ten Years</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jun 2010 03:29:22 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Controversy]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[robert thurman]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[ These horrible murders took place over ten years ago, and in all that time not a shred of evidence has ever been found linking Dorje Shugden practitioners to them. Nonetheless, the Dalai Lama and Office of Tibet continue to repeat this calumny on their website and literature. Repeating a lie over and over again does...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="aligncenter " src="/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/3808-1.jpg" alt="" width="460" /> These horrible murders took place over ten years ago, and in all that time not a shred of evidence has ever been found linking Dorje Shugden practitioners to them. Nonetheless, the Dalai Lama and Office of Tibet continue to repeat this calumny on their website and literature.</p>
<p>Repeating a lie over and over again does not make it the truth. We will not repeat the defamations here: you can check the Dalai Lama’s literature for the ghastly pictures of poor Lobsang Gyatso and the false accusations. We do however need to address the false accusations here, as they are parrotted over and over again by supporters of the ban against Dorje Shugden practice. This is even though they have already been proven unfounded by the Indian police years ago due to no evidence, and it is a lie to say that any “arrest warrants remain pending” as there are no actual suspects.</p>
<h1>Any number of possible suspects</h1>
<p>In reality, there are any number of possible suspects for the murders but the true culprits have never been found as the Dalai Lama prefers conveniently for his political objectives to keep the blame on Dorje Shugden practitioners. Why? To try and convince the world that they are evil and so his ban on their religious practice is reasonable. The fact is, these practitioners have never committed any violent actions. They are peace-loving Buddhists who follow the non-violence, love and compassion taught to them by Trijang Rinpoche &#8212; the Dalai Lama&#8217;s own teacher &#8212; and other great Buddhist Lamas of Je Tsongkhapa&#8217;s tradition.</p>
<p>According to a disciple of Geshe Lobsang Gyatso, as reported in the Austrian Buddhist magazine &#8220;Ursache und Wirkung&#8221;, July 2006, page 73, before he was killed, Lobsang Gyatso had to face many death threats, but refused any personal security.</p>
<p>Lobsang Gyatso was very outspoken and had many targets, all of them those who disagreed with the Dalai Lama. For example, the Dalai Lama&#8217;s own brother had a problem with his renouncing the cause of a Free Tibet. Also, in 1962 the Dalai Lama tried to unite all schools of Tibetan Buddhism under his authority, but this autocratic move was opposed by the Thirteen Tibetan Settlements and the 16th Karmapa. The Dalai Lama has many enemies, and Lobsang Gyatso goaded them all.</p>
<p>Helmut Gassner, an Austrian Buddhist monk who was a translator for the Dalai Lama for seventeen years around this period, spoke about the murders in a talk he gave to the Friedrich-Naumann-Foundation Hamburg, on March 26th 1999 (<a href="http://www.wisdombuddhadorjeshugden.org/speechnaumannfoundation.pdf" target="_blank">http://www.wisdombuddhadorjeshugden.org/speechnaumannfoundation.pdf</a>):</p>
<blockquote><p>“The Director of the Dialectics School was well known for his slanderous writings in which he would drag through the mud anything that veered even slightly from the course established by the government-in-exile: famous masters, the big monastic universities and even the Tibetan guerillas were his targets. In one of his last articles he wrote, &#8220;&#8230;these people will not cease to criticize the Dalai Lama until blood flows from their bodies&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>Given the character of the assassination and the humiliations the Tibetan guerilla movement had been subjected to in earlier years, one could have assumed that the search for the murderer would eventually also lead to them. But that obviously did not occur; already the next day, Dharamsala&#8217;s local newspaper claimed that the murderer would certainly be found among the Dorje Shugden Society in Delhi. Aside from who committed the murders, this gruesome act was exploited to the hilt by the government-in-exile with only one aim in mind: Resorting to all possible means they tried to incriminate the Dorje Shugden Society in Delhi in order to put its leading monks behind Indian bars. For the benefit of the press, the image of a Dorje Shugden sect with bloodthirsty, cultish, terrorist and fundamentalist attributes was successfully established linking it effectively with the traditionally depicted wrathful appearance of the deity while cleverly neglecting to mention that many wrathful Buddhist deities are represented in considerably more terrifying ways.”</p>
<p>Geshe Kelsang Gyatso also made reference to other suspects for the murders in his reply to a <a href="http://www.cesnur.org/press/Newsweek.htm" target="_blank">1997 article in Newsweek</a>, where Robert Thurman offensively and ignorantly described Dorje Shugden practitioners as the “Taliban of Buddhism”:</p>
<p>&#8220;Robert Thurman is quoted as saying: &#8220;I think there&#8217;s no doubt that Shugden was behind the killings.&#8221; Of course, killing people is very bad, and I utterly condemn these appalling murders, but by reading the letter addressed to HH the Dalai Lama known as the &#8216;Mongoose Canine Letter&#8217;, we can clearly understand that HH the Dalai Lama has many enemies, so why are only Shugden supporters suspected? It is a great pity that Lobsang Gyatso who was a 70-year old Geshe died in the most horrible of circumstances, seemingly because HH the Dalai Lama has many enemies.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>The Shugden Society in New Delhi has always denied any involvement in the murders or threats and after an investigation by the Indian police were found to have no involvement in the murders. [Mike Wilson, 1999, Schisms, murder, and hungry ghosts in Shangra-La - internal conflicts in Tibetan Buddhist sect.] This fact has been ignored by the Tibetan government in Exile, which continues to make the false accusation on its website.</p>
<p>There are therefore many people who might have wanted Lobsang Gyatso dead &#8212; all enemies of the Dalai Lama, in fact. The Tibetan Government in Exile (TGIE) have exploited his death to cause problems for Shugden practitioners.</p>
<h1>Shred of evidence?</h1>
<p>There was only one possible shred of evidence, a supposed “threatening letter” found in Lobsang Gyatso’s office.</p>
<p>According to the Indian police in 1996, there was a “threatening letter to the monk Lobsang Gyatso, and it proves the direct connection of murderers with Shugden”. He also said: “The six murderers have fled to Tibet where they live under protection from China.” The investigation stopped there.</p>
<p>On a Swiss TV program discussing the subject, the TGIE minister Tashi Wangdu exhibited the “evidence” in front of the camera. According to the commentator, this was the death threat letter sent by Dorje Shugden followers to the murder victim as mentioned by the police.</p>
<p>Later, the Tibetan text on the letter was copied and translated by various Tibetan speakers. It contained absolutely no death threat at all. It was simply an impertinent letter containing a challenge to debate the issue so as to settle the differences.</p>
<p>As to where and how the Chinese are supposedly sheltering six murderers in Tibet, there has not been any evidence of this either in ten years. The Dorje Shugden Devotees Charitable and Religious Society, whom apparently supplied the murderers, continue their peaceful work in India to oppose the ban and none of their members have fled anywhere.</p>
<p>See also the <a href="http://www.shugdensociety.info/historyEvents1997EN.html" target="_blank">Dorje Shugden Devotees Charitable and Religious Society account</a>.</p>
<p>See also Did Dorje Shugden practitioners issue death threats? (including the misinformation spread by Tashi Wangdi) <span class="highlight">(Editor&#8217;s Note: This link appears to have been removed from the mentioned website)</span>.</p>
<p><span class="highlight">This repeated defamation, with blatantly political objectives, is one of the many reasons Western Shugden Society members everywhere are following the Dalai Lama to ask him to “Stop Lying!”</span></p>
<p><span class="source">(Source: <a href="http://wisdombuddhadorjeshugden.blogspot.com/2008/06/defamatory-accusations-of-murder.html" target="_blank">http://wisdombuddhadorjeshugden.blogspot.com/2008/06/defamatory-accusations-of-murder.html</a>)</span></p>
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		<title>Shugden Delegates Leave</title>
		<link>http://www.dorjeshugden.com/all-articles/the-controversy/shugden-delegates-leave/</link>
		<comments>http://www.dorjeshugden.com/all-articles/the-controversy/shugden-delegates-leave/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 07 Mar 2010 18:13:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Controversy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cholsum organisation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cholsum organization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dharamsala]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mcleod ganj]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shugden society]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[EXPRESS NEWS SERVICE Dharamsala, 28 Aug 1998 Even though the ongoing controversial convention of Cholsum Organisation revived the bitterness within the struggling Tibetan community on the Shugden issue, the flared up emotions at McLeod Ganj seem to have calmed down for now. This follows the return of 120 Shugden delegates to their society headquarters in...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_14840" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 460px"><img class="wp-image-14840 " src="/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/2299-1.jpg" alt="" width="460" />
<p class="wp-caption-text">McLeod Ganj, site of the Cholsum Organisation convention</p>
</div>
<h1>EXPRESS NEWS SERVICE</h1>
<h2 class="sub">Dharamsala, 28 Aug 1998</h2>
<p>Even though the ongoing controversial convention of Cholsum Organisation revived the bitterness within the struggling Tibetan community on the Shugden issue, the flared up emotions at McLeod Ganj seem to have calmed down for now. This follows the return of 120 Shugden delegates to their society headquarters in Delhi after failing to seek entry into the convention.</p>
<p>Security is still on the high side in McLeod Ganj to avert any untoward incident in the aftermath of the prevention of the deity’s supporters from entering into the township, which also houses some individual worshippers of Dorje Shugden. According to source, the &#8220;two-day long crisis during which the Shugden Society delegates had to be kept under judicial custody in Dehra keeping in view the law and order situation,&#8221; could have been avoided had the Cholsum Organisation and the Tibetan government-in-exile got in touch with the local police with all the details of convention well in time.</p>
<p>&#8220;We were told just four to five days before the start of the convention, which was supposed to be the hot bed of controversy with religious sentiment of warring Tibetan sections involved in it. We would have even sorted out the issue of security by having discussions with both sides, prior to the event&#8221;, said a district police official.</p>
<p>&#8220;The local police found it difficult to control the mob of Tibetans in McLeod Ganj on Wednesday night, when they protested against the local administration for having allowed the Shugden members to begin their journey from Delhi to Dharamsala,&#8221; he added.</p>
<p>&#8220;Police circles here feel that when the Tibetan government-in-exile knew that the event could lead to a disturbance within the Tibetan community as most of the people in McLeod Ganj recognise Shugdens as enemies of Dalai Lama&#8221;, it could have even not held the convention to avoid confrontation. The Tibetan government-in-exile has so far adopted a tight-lipped approach on the controversy, maintaining that &#8220;the Cholsum convention was purely a private event by a non-government organisation. Fearing a confrontation with Shugdens, the security department had already alerted the district authorities in advance.&#8221;</p>
<p>On the other hand, the district police found that there was a dire need of keeping a regular update on the Tibetan government affair, involving its political and religious events requiring security. &#8220;A last minute alert is not enough&#8221;, said a police officer on terms of anonymity.</p>
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