It is a significant reason to rejoice to know that His Holiness the Dalai Lama has agreed to accept a long-life offering from the Sikkim Government and the Tibetan community. Accepting Tenshug means that the Dalai Lama is intending to remain with us for a significant length of time to continue to turn the wheel of Dharma.
It is also interesting that the Dalai Lama is visiting Sikkim, the Indian state which is host to Rumtek Monastery, the traditional seat of the the Karmapa which is at the centre of the Karmapa controversy. There are two claimants to the throne, one of the two being Ogyen Trinley whom the Dalai Lama and CTA supported and endorsed - a decision which split the Karma Kagyu community in an unfortunate and similar fashion the way the Dalai Lama and CTA's ban on Dorje Shugden split the Gelugpa community.
Ogyen Trinley was the Karmapa that the Chinese Government recognized and enthroned after the successful maneuvering of Tai Situ Rinpoche, some say a crony of the Chinese government. Standing against Ogyen Trinley is the other claimant Thaye Dorje, who was recognized and enthroned by the senior regent of the Kagyus, the Shamarpa as was his right. It was somewhat of a surprise that the Dalai Lama would validate a candidate (in a matter of the Karma Kagyu which the Dalai Lama has no locus to begin with) that would appear to place Sikkim firmly in the hands of the Chinese. And this in light of the fact that not only does the CTA view China as an enemy of the Tibetans, but Sikkim is also a high potential flashpoint for a Sino-Indian conflict given that China once claimed (and perhaps still does) Sikkim as its state, much to the displeasure of the Indian government.
The Dalai Lama and CTA's decision to back Ogyen Trinley has three major repercussions which are as yet, unresolved:
(i) it split the Karma Kagyus which make up a large percentage of the Tibetan population and pitched monks against monks in a manner unbecoming of the sangha, and one which seriously threatens the good standing of monks in the community [
http://www.dorjeshugden.com/all-articles/the-controversy/how-can-there-be-violence-in-paradise/]
(ii) it undermined the Tibetan people's requirement to respect the laws of their host nation, India. Three Indian courts have found that the legal claimant to the Rumtek seat, and therefore the throne of the Karmapa is Thaye Dorje. This is law. And yet with the Dalai Lama and CTA backing the opposing candidate, the message can be interpreted that Indian law need not be heeded or that the decisions of the highest court in India cannot bind the Dalai Lama or the Tibetan government. By now agreeing to visit Sikkim officially the Dalai Lama is in fact affirming the Tibetan people's stance against the Federal Laws of India. While the Dalai Lama was invited by the State government of Sikkim, one would presume that the Tibetans have a duty to observe the federal laws of their host country;
(iii) it betrays the trust of the Indian people who are highly sensitive to border issues with China, which in the past have sent the two Asian giants into war. Sikkim is an important state to India due to its location as a security buffer between China and India and rather than being sensitive to that, the Dalai Lama and CTA continue to stand by Ogyen Trinley whom the Indian government have in the past suspected to be a Chinese plant. Ogyen Trinley and his mentor Tai Situ Rinpoche remain closely watched by Indian security and in fact are restricted from entering Sikkim.
The Karmapa controversy together with the Dorje Shugden ban account for the biggest splits within the Tibetan Buddhist community.
Dalai Lama leaves Dharamshala for Northeast India TourPhayul[Thursday, March 21, 2013 17:00]
His Holiness the Dalai Lama leaves Dharamshala, March 21, 2013. (Phayul photo/Norbu Wangyal)
DHARAMSHALA, March 21: The Tibetan Spiritual leader His Holiness the Dalai Lama today left Dharamshala for visits to Ravangla, Sikkim and Salugara in Northeast India.
The Sikkim Government has requested the five-day tour to the state.
The Tibetan Nobel Laureate is scheduled to begin his visit from Ravangla in Sikkim where he will perform the Vajrakilaya (Dorjee Phurba) consecration ceremony of the Buddha Statue followed by a teaching on Thirty-Seven Practices of Bodhisattva (Gyasay Laklen Sodunma).
On second day in Ravangla, His Holiness will confer White Tara Long Life Empowerment (Dolker Jenang Tsewang) and the State Government of Sikkim and Tibetan Communities in Ravangla will offer the long-life prayer ceremony (Tenshug) to His Holiness.
On the final leg of the visit, the seventy-seven-year-old Tibetan leader will visit to Salugura, Siliguri, where he is scheduled to teach on Tsong Khapa’s Concise Stages for the Path to Enlightenment (Lamrim Dudon) and Longchen Rabjam's Relaxing the Mind Itself (Sem-nyid Nyesol).
On March 29, His Holiness will confer an Avalokiteshvara Initiation (Chenresig Wangchen) and will return to Dharamshala on March 30.
The Tibetan leader visited Sikkim in 2010, during which he toured Ravangla in the south of the state, where he addressed a congregation of people at the Tibetan settlement. He also visited the Ralong Monastery, arguably the oldest monastery in Sikkim built during the late 1600’s.
http://www.phayul.com/news/article.aspx?article=Dalai+Lama+leaves+Dharamshala+for+Northeast+India+Tour&id=33229