Are there things that we don't talk about? Is it too taboo to consider that the Dalai Lama might not be a Buddha of Compassion but a destroyer of Je Tsongkhapa's tradition? The evidence seems to point to this unless there are clear, logical reasons why this is not the case.
On top of what TK has already very clearly expounded on, I'd like to also shed my views on this.
At our level of practice (well, mine anyway) there is no way for us to judge the level of anyone, least of all the teachers. So we are also "faulted" in this way when we begin this conversation.
I think of Dalai Lama as Chenrezig as I do have faith in my teacher and his lineage of teachers. My own teacher, the teachers before him and many highly attained masters of our lineage have recognised Dalai Lama as Chenrezig. Whether or not he really is will never be verified by ourselves, but there must be some level of trust we have in our own teachers and lineage lamas.
In any case, whether or not he really is is secondary. More important, I think is, as TK has already pointed out, how we affect the minds and practice of other students. If we are talking badly about the Dalai Lama, based upon our own very limited perceptions, then we can become a direct cause for so many negative things to arise, such as:
- for students to lose faith and begin to doubt their teacher, the dalai Lama. we become responsible for their broken samaya. Whatever good and practice they may have done by their relationship with the Dalai Lama, would be derailed and we would be responsible for that.
- we show others that it is "alright" for us to criticise, talk and "discuss" the actions of the Lamas, gauging them to be right or wrong according to our own limited compass. one student does it, then another, then another, then eventually, we are all talking about other lamas. Some may be out of some kind of genuine concern, but there is the risk that the talk spins off into blatant rumor-mongering. People will look back upon us and say, "well you are doing it, so we can too." Then what is sacred anymore?
- If we are drawing attention to the negatives of a Lama - ANY LAMA - then what makes us so sure of our own Lama? Are we that sure of our judgement to know whether one lama is better or not? If the Dalai Lama - or any other Lama - could act in such faulty ways, then what's to say our Lama isn't acting in wrong ways also?
It is not to say that we don't bring attention at all to what a teacher may be doing that is perceived as wrong or unusual. But I think it would be more helpful to provide education and knowledge to people, according to the teachings and "rules" of Dharma and allow people to make up their own minds. At the same time, we are also sharing Dharma, so there is much more benefit in this way. We are not just directing our comments at the Dalai Lama, as TK has already made very clear, but directly affecting the practice of millions of other students in the world. Do we want to risk that? We must think clearly how our actions and what we are saying against or about another lama will ENCOURAGE a student in his practice or DISCOURAGE him.