Below is an extract from a recent news re the Atlanta visit by His Holiness. I thought it is relevant and appropriate if we too practice the "middle way" when it comes to viewing the Shugden controversy. Of course the below is based on bridging the conflict with China, but I find it quite good and useful.
How Can The Middle Way Serve as a Tool for Conflict Resolution?The Middle Way is composed of The Noble Eightfold Path and the practice of those precepts and the conditions of each produces advancement toward wholesome states of being through intellect and understanding.
1. Right view which is true wisdom and knowledge into the nature of reality
sees the world as a stream of changing, unsatisfactory and conditioned processes.
2. Right resolve concerns the emotions, with
thoughts channeled towards peaceful freedom and away from ill-will and cruelty to lovingkindness and compassion to transcendence.
3. Right speech, action or livelihood.
abstains from lying, divisive or harsh speech and empty gossip. Restraining from these or the immediate acknowledgement to another person when such acts occur is the attainment of virtue.
4. Right action is
abstaining from wrong behavior, taking what is not given, and wrong conduct to sense pleasures.
5. Right livelihood is
avoiding ways of making a living which cause suffering to others. Those based on trickery and greed or on trade in weapons, living beings, alcoholic drink or poison.
6. Right effort is directed at
developing the mind in a wholesome way by avoiding unwholesome states of mind that express attachment, HATRED or delusion.
7. Right mindfulness is crucial for Buddhist meditation and is a state of
keen awareness of mental and physical phenomena and how they interrelate.
8. Right concentration or unification refers to levels of
deep calm through the various forms of meditation.
from: Dalai Lama Suggests The Middle Way as a Bridge to Conflict Resolution With China, Oct 19th 2010http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/7072596-dalai-lama-suggests-the-middle-way-as-a-bridge-to-conflict-resolution-with-china