I joined an interesting little debate on Facebook today. There's a link on Facebook to the recent article about religious persecution (the one with the videos) and the following discussion:
Lozang Gyaltsen:
most people don't think about much beyond their next meal or the next time they're gonna get laid.. they certainly don't think much of any substance. This sad fact of the human condition is why leaders, like HHDL, think they can do and say what they want with impunity. At the very least, we can surmise that HHDL seriously underestimated just how seriously practitioners took the teachings of and their samaya with their own Lamas. Those who blindly follow without a second thought are incapable of coherent and critical thinking skills. What they have to say is of little value and what they think is so distorted as to be meaningless.
Gaz Oksas:
?Lozang Gyaltsan that reminds me of another quote (Im just full of it): God gave men a brain and a penis, but only enough blood to run one at a time. Have to say though, its not as though woemn dont abide in desire.
You think he underestimated? Or he knew precisley wed fight back?
Lozang Gyaltsan:
I was on the fence about this one for quite some time.. subscribing to the "bigger-picture" notion that he did this to get Shugden practitioners to close ranks and to rid the tradition of those who were practicing and shouldn't.. His remarks, in the West, always seemed to lean toward a guarded tolerance of those who disagree. BUT.. those of us in the West who have close-ties to Tibetans {or access to Tibetan news-sources} have the advantage of hearing {or reading} public temper tantrums and threatening rants that are directed toward the Tibetans... so, yes, I have come to believe, as a direct result of his actions, that he seriously over-estimated his influence.. I do,however, believe that he must have known some of us would resist attempts to get us to break samaya.. I don't think, however, that he realized just how much this would diminish his world-wide celebrity.
If he did this to solidify the tradition, then he has succeeded. There are now a far greater number of people practicing Shugden than at any time in history. If he did it to get rid of the tradition, he has failed miserably..
Either way, he has certainly eradicated the notion that his is, in any way, infallible or incapable of making mistakes...
myself:
?Lozang Gyaltsan I'm not sure the Dalai Lama was really all that concerned about his celebrity status. In spite of all the politics around the DS issue, His Holiness still enjoys much global recognition; his public teachings are still booked out by tens of thousands of people.
I've been more inclined to look at it this way - that he is risking his own reputation for the sake of saying something about a practice (which eventually, has proven to become stronger than ever). If he really was all just about celebrity and reputation and the 8 worldly dharmas, would this be a move that any diplomat or leader would take? It seems unlikely, which has only led me to think that he must have his reasons for the ban, that are beyond what we can perceive. That he would risk all the very things we perceive as important (status, reputation, comfort, even sponsorship and support), for the sake of talking about Dorje Shugden, is an act of kindness in itself
******
What do you all think? Do you think the Dalai Lama did know how we'd react - and imposed the ban anyway? Or he grossly underestimated just how strong and resilient Shugden practitioners really are to have upheld the practice in spite of all the opposition they are facing?