I've been looking at some of the Dorje Shugden / Dalai Lama videos on YouTube on reading the comments with interest... also checking in on very tibetan forums like phayul where the opinions for Dalai Lama and against Dorje Shugden are very, very strong.
I guess it is easy to just get very frustrated with them and even angry, for the accusations they make against DS practitioners - they say things like all DS practitioners are all from China/ being supported by China / wish to harm the Dalai Lama / are cultists / are receiving money from China to defame the dalai lama and threaten Tibetan independence.
Sometimes, it's just so plain ridiculous that it becomes easier to just ignore them and move on to another video!
However, I have been trying to understand where they are coming and what kind of angst or suffering they may be going through themselves... and therefore, how we might be able to lend support or more understanding to them, and open up more channels of dialogue, respect and harmony.
From what I have gathered, these people - usually Tibetan – really are in a lot of angst about having lost their country and having to face the growing likelihood that they will never get it back.
They do have a lot of faith in the dalai lama and do very much believe what he says and teaches. Remember that this is a culture that is brought up to have a lot of very deeply embedded and natural faith and belief in the lamas, and are not brought up to really question them in the way we do. When the dalai says that DS practice threatens the Tibetan cause and his life, they REALLY DO BELIEVE IT. It is perhaps just quite a simple equation for them where they are probably thinking, “Our lama has already told us this is harmful for our people and his life – so why are people still practicing it?”. It is simplistic perhaps, but this is their truth, their reality. It could be as “simple” for them as it is for us who think “but our lamas have given us this sacred practice, how can I just abandon this commitment?”
These people do seem to find China a very, very huge threat to them (as can be seen by many of their comments on youtube videos). I have met Tibetans who grew up in Tibet with a lot of discrimination and mistreatment by the Chinese, and this painful past is still very raw for them, for sure. That is a reality for them and I think it is not that they are trying to just accuse accuse accuse without grounds, but they maybe just don’t want this side of what Tibetans have experienced to be watered down and forgotten about.
The DS issues becomes very much mixed in with all this as, to them, it is about whether they can get their country back or not, be able to live in their own country without discrimination or not. Perhaps for them, it is about having experienced discrimination and the deep suffering of losing their country/people and seeing DS practice (according to what DL has explained) as something that prolongs and perpetuates this suffering, of themselves having to live in someone else’s country, and of their fellow people who continue experiencing discrimination within their “own” country of Tibet. It could be as “simple” as them looking upon DS practitioners and thinking, “Dalai lama has already said that this practice affects us being able to get back our country. We have suffered so much already so why are you allowing it to continue?”
Taking these points into account, and remembering that for these people, this is their truth and their reality (no matter how illogical / unaligned to Dharma logic and teachings it may seem), how can we work with or even begin to talk to them in a way that would foster more understanding and peace? Dalai Lama and TGIE will maintain a very strong stance, but on the level of practitioner-to-practitioner or even just human-to-human, how can we begin to approach them with more kindness and empathy to build respect and understanding?