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{{Short description|Controversy surrounding protector spirit of Gelug Buddhism}}
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{{see|Dorje Shugden|}}
{{Tibetan Buddhism}} {{Tibetan Buddhism}}
The '''Dorje Shugden controversy''' is a controversy over ], also known as '''Dolgyal''', whom some consider to be one of several ] of the ] school, the school of ] to which the ]s belong. Dorje Shugden has become the symbolic focal point{{sfn|Mills|2003|p=55}}<ref group=web name="Dodin"></ref> of a conflict over the "purity"{{sfn|Kay|2004}} of the Gelug school and the inclusion of non-Gelug teachings, especially ] ones.
'''Dorje Shugden''' ({{bo-tw|t=རྡོ་རྗེ་ཤུགས་ལྡན|w=rdo-rje shugs-ldan}}), "] Possessing Strength", or in his regional appellation '''Dolgyal Shugden''' ({{bo|t=དོལ་རྒྱལ་ཤུགས་ལྡན|w=dol rgyal shugs ldan}}), "Shugden, King of Dhol" is a ] in ], especially its ] school. Dorje Shugden's precise nature &mdash; an emanation of ],<ref> by Kyabje Trijang Dorje Chang. p. 5. retrieved 2008-12-07</ref><ref> (folio 76a) by Pabongkha Rinpoche, retrieved 2008-12-08</ref> either a transcendent or a worldly ], or a malevolent ]<ref> by the BBC, 2005-07-13, retrieved 2008-12-06</ref> &mdash; has been the subject of controversy among some adherents of Tibetan Buddhism since the 1970s when the Fourteenth ] (who himself once engaged in the practice) started to speak out against the practice and its adherents. The ] and his supporters call Dorje Shugden a "harmful spirit."<ref>Dalai Lama's official website "http://www.dalailama.com"</ref> According to the ], the Dalai Lama sometimes refers to him as a "pro-Chinese demon".<ref>Novosti News ~ China accuses Dalai Lama of ordering assassinations </ref> Followers of the Deity however believe him to be an enlightened being and emanation of Buddha ].<ref> by Kyabje Trijang Dorje Chang. p. 8. retrieved 2008-12-07</ref> For more about his nature and function, see ].


In the 1930s, ], who favoured an "exclusive" stance, started to promote Shugden as a major protector of the Gelug school,{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=43}}{{refn|group=note|name="Kay, David 2004 p. 43a"|David Kay: "A key element of Phabongkha Rinpoche’s outlook was the cult of the protective deity Dorje Shugden, which he married to the idea of Gelug exclusivism and employed against other traditions as well as against those within the Gelug who had eclectic tendencies."{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=43}}}}<ref group=web name="Dreyfus1" />{{refn|group=note|name="dalailama.com_a"|Georges Dreyfus: "For Pa-bong-ka, particularly at the end of his life, one of the main functions of Gyel-chen Dor-je Shuk-den as Ge-luk protector is the use of violent means (the adamantine force) to protect the Ge-luk tradition This passage clearly presents the goal of the propitiation of Shuk-den as the protection of the Ge-luk tradition through violent means, even including the killing of its enemies Pa-bong-ka takes the references to eliminating the enemies of the Ge-luk tradition as more than stylistic conventions or usual ritual incantations. It may concern the elimination of actual people by the protector."<ref group=web name="Dreyfus1" />}} who harms any Gelug practitioner who blends his practice with non-Gelug practices.{{sfn|Mills|2003|p=55-56}}{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=43}}<ref group=web name="Dreyfus1" /> The conflict resurfaced with the publication of ''The Yellow Book'' in 1976, containing stories about Shugden's wrathful acts against Gelugpas who also practiced Nyingma teachings. In response, the ], a Gelugpa himself and advocate of an ] to Tibetan Buddhism,{{sfn|Mills|2003}}{{sfn|Kay|2004}} began speaking out against the practice of Dorje Shugden in 1978.{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=47}}
==Overview==


The controversy attracted attention in the West following demonstrations by Dorje Shugden practitioners, especially ]'s Britain-based ], which broke away from the Gelug school in 1991. Other factions supporting Dorje Shugden are Serpom Monastic University and Shar Ganden Monastery, both of which separated from mainstream Gelug in 2008.
The practice of Dorje Shugden began at the time of the Fifth ] Lobsang Gyatso (1617–1682 AD). Those who have followed the practice of ] most recently in the 20th and 21st centuries include the majority of the most famous Gelug teachers, including ], Ling Rinpoche (senior tutor to the Dalai Lama), ] (junior tutor of the Dalai Lama), Zong Rinpoche, Gangchen Rinpoche, Gonsar Rinpoche, ], ], ], Kundeling Rinpoche, Tomo Geshe Rinpoche, and Trijang Choktrul.


In April 2019, ] published an article ] made in 2016 by the Dalai Lama, which Rinpoche said equate to overt permission to practice Dorje Shugden, representing a complete reversal of the Dalai Lama's former position.
Trijang Rinpoche, the "root Guru" of the 14th Dalai Lama,<ref name="Dalai Lama p. 26">Dalai Lama, ''Union of Bliss and Emptiness'', p. 26</ref> introduced the Dorje Shugden practice to the Dalai Lama in 1959. Some twenty years later the 14th Dalai Lama stated that the practice is in conflict with the state protector ] and with the main protective goddess of the Gelug tradition and the Tibetan people, ]. In the West, he also stated that the practice was in conflict with his eclectic religious approach as well as his political responsibilities.


== History ==
After the publication of Zemey Rinpoche's supposedly sectarian text ''The Yellow Book'' on Shugden, in 1978, the Dalai Lama began to speak out against the use of the deity as an institutional protector.<ref name=Mills>Mills, Martin A, Human Rights in Global Perspective, ] ISBN 0-415-30410-5, page 56</ref> He stated that individual should decide for themselves if the want to practice it privately.<ref name=Mills/> From Spring 1996 onwards the Dalai Lama decided to move more forcefully on this issue.<ref name=Mills/> By doing this he responded "to growing pressure - particularly from other schools of Tibetan Buddhism such as the Nyingmapa, who threatened withdrawal of their support in the Exiled Government project".<ref name=Mills/> The ] stated during Buddhist Tantric initiation that Shugden would be 'an evil spirit' whose actions were detrimental to the 'cause of Tibet'.<ref name=Mills/> The Dalai Lama concluded that henceforth he won't give Tantric initiation to worshippers of Shugden<ref name=Mills/>, because since "the unbridgeable divergence of their respective positions would inevitably undermine the sacred guru-student relationship, and thus compromise his role as a teacher (and by extension his health)."<ref name=Mills/> On the other hand, as Von Bruck explains:
<blockquote>
"Many of the present Lamas of the Gelukpa tradition have received their teachings from ] or ]. In those cases where he is the 'root Lama' (rtsa ba'i bla ma) who has handed down all three aspects of the tradition (oral transmission of texts, commentaries, the empowerments), the relationship to him is absolutely binding. This is an essential part of Vajrayana practice. Otherwise, according to Tantric tradition he might be regarded as a person who has broken the Tantric vow (dam-nyams) and this would concern the Dalai Lama himself as having been initiated by Shugden practice."<ref>Canonicity and Divine Interference: The Tulkus and the Shugden-Controversy, MICHAEL VON BRÜCK</ref>


===Pre-1930s===
</blockquote>
Dorje Shugden, also known as ''Dolgyal'', originated as a ] "angry and vengeful spirit" of ]. Originally from the ] school as a minor protector that was part of the Three Gyalpo Kings (Shugden, Setrap, and Tsiu Marpo), Shugden was subsequently adopted as a "minor protector" of the Gelug, the newest of the schools of ],{{sfn|Schaik|2011|p=129}} headed by the Dalai Lamas (although nominally the ]s).<ref group=web name="Dreyfus1">{{cite web |url=http://www.dalailama.com/messages/dolgyal-shugden/ganden-tripa/the-shugden-affair-i |title=''The Shugden affair: Origins of a Controversy (Part I)'' |author=Georges Dreyfus |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131103131534/http://dalailama.com/messages/dolgyal-shugden/ganden-tripa/the-shugden-affair-i |archive-date=2013-11-03 |url-status=dead|author-link=Georges Dreyfus }}</ref><ref group=web name="Dreyfus2">{{cite web |url=http://www.dalailama.com/messages/dolgyal-shugden/ganden-tripa/the-shugden-affair-ii |title=''The Shugden affair: Origins of a Controversy (Part II)'' |author=Georges Dreyfus |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161211114100/http://dalailama.com/messages/dolgyal-shugden/ganden-tripa/the-shugden-affair-ii |archive-date=2016-12-11 |url-status=dead|author-link=Georges Dreyfus }}</ref>
According to news reports by Al Jazeera and France 24<ref>The Dalai Lama's Demons, France 24 </ref>, the words and actions of the Dalai Lama constitute a ban on the practice.<ref>, Al Jazeera's People & Power, 2008-09-30, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> Others allege that such "] discrimination" is illegal according to both the ] and the ], as well as the ].<ref name="cesnur.org">, Geshe Kelsang Gyatso, 1997-12-09, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>


=== 1930s-1940s Pabongkha ===
According to Geshe ], who has been helping to defend the rights of Tibetans in India affected by the ban, the controversy has arisen only due to politics. There is a spiritual view of Dorje Shugden held by those who do the practice and a political view held by those who do not. In a talk in 2006, he said:


====Promotion of ''Dorje Shugden''====
''We know that it is quite common nowadays, people are used to saying, “Dorje Shugdän’s problem”. Dorje Shugdän has no problem at all! He is an enlightened being who is completely free from samsara’s problems. The problem is a human problem created by political people. These people created a problem to fulfil their own wishes.<ref>Summer Festival, 23.07.06</ref>''
In the 1930s, Pabongkhapa Déchen Nyingpo started to promote ''Dorje Shugden''. According to Kay, Pabongka fashioned Shugden as a violent protector of the Gelug school, who is employed against other traditions,{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=43}}{{refn|group=note|name="Kay, David 2004 p. 43b"|David Kay: "A key element of Phabongkha Rinpoche’s outlook was the cult of the protective deity Dorje Shugden, which he married the idea of Gelug exclusivism and employed against other traditions as well as against those within the Gelug who had eclectic tendencies."{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=43}}}}<ref group=web name="Dreyfus1" />{{refn|group=note|name="dalailama.com_b"|Georges Dreyfus: "For Pa-bong-ka, particularly at the end of his life, one of the main functions of Gyel-chen Dor-je Shuk-den as Ge-luk protector is the use of violent means (the adamantine force) to protect the Ge-luk tradition This passage clearly presents the goal of the propitiation of Shuk-den as the protection of the Ge-luk tradition through violent means, even including the killing of its enemies Pa-bong-ka takes the references to eliminating the enemies of the Ge-luk tradition as more than stylistic conventions or usual ritual incantations. It may concern the elimination of actual people by the protector."<ref group=web name="Dreyfus1" />}} transforming Dorje Shugden's "marginal practice into a central element of the Ge-luk tradition", thus "replacing the traditional supra-mundane protectors of the Ge-luk tradition",<ref group=web name="Dreyfus1" /> namely ], ], ], ], ] and ] who were appointed by ].{{refn|group=note|name="Kay, David 2004 p. 48-I"|David Kay: "It seems that during the 1940s, supporters of Phabongkha began to proclaim the fulfilment of this tradition and to maintain that the Tibetan government should turn its allegiance away from Pehar, the state protector, to Dorje Shugden. The next stage in the status elevation process was Phabongkha’s claim that Dorje Shugden had now replaced the traditional supramundane protectors of the Gelug tradition such as Mahakala, Vaisravana and, most specifically, Kalarupa (‘the Dharma-King’), the main protector of the Gelug who, it is believed, was bound to an oath by Tsong Khapa himself.""{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=48}}}}{{refn|group=note|name="Controversy 2014"|George Dreyfus: "These descriptions have been controversial. Traditionally, the Ge-luk tradition has been protected by the Dharma-king (dam can chos rgyal), the supra-mundane deity bound to an oath given to Dzong-ka-ba, the founder of the tradition. The tradition also speaks of three main protectors adapted to the three scopes of practice described in the Stages of the Path (skyes bu gsum gyi srung ma): Mahakala for the person of great scope, Vaibravala for the person of middling scope, and the Dharma-king for the person of small scope. By describing Shuk-den as "the protector of the tradition of the victorious lord Manjushri", Pa-bong-ka suggests that he is the protector of the Ge-luk tradition, replacing the protectors appointed by Dzong-ka-ba himself. This impression is confirmed by one of the stories that Shuk-den's partisans use to justify their claim. According to this story, the Dharma-king has left this world to retire in the pure land of Tushita having entrusted the protection of the Ge-luk tradition to Shuk-den. Thus, Shuk-den has become the main Ge-luk protector replacing the traditional supra-mundane protectors of the Ge-luk tradition, indeed a spectacular promotion in the pantheon of the tradition<ref group=web name="Dreyfus1" />}}


According to ], "Shuk-den was nothing but a minor Ge-luk protector before the 1930s when Pa-bong-ka started to promote him aggressively as the main Ge-luk protector."<ref group=web name="Dreyfus2" /> Dreyfus also notes,
==Nature and function==
{{blockquote|he propitiation of Shukden as a Geluk protector is not an ancestral tradition, but a relatively recent invention of tradition associated with the revival movement within the Geluk spearheaded by Pabongkha.<ref group=web> by Georges Dreyfus, JIATS, no. 1 (October 2005), THL #T1218, 21, section 3: ''The Shukden Affair and Buddhist Modernism'', retrieved 2009-10-04.</ref>}}


This change is reflected in artwork, since there is "lack of Dorje Shugden art in the Gelug school prior to the end of the 19th century."{{sfn|Watt|2013}}
There are differing views regarding Dorje Shugden's origin, nature and function that have been debated increasingly vigorously since the 1970s. According to David Kay, there are two main opposing conceptions:


==== Persecution of the Rimé movement ====
*a ], an enlightened being who is a deity that has been worshipped as a Buddha ever since the seventeenth century as the chief Protector of the ] Tradition<ref>Kay (2004:230)</ref>
''Dorje Shugden'' was a key tool in Pabongkhapa's persecution of the flourishing ], an ecumenical movement which fused the teachings of the ], ] and Nyingma,{{sfn|Schaik|2011|p=165-169}} in response to the dominance of the Gelug school. Non-Gelug, especially Nyingma, monasteries were forced to convert to the Gelug position.
*a ] whose relatively short existence over only a few centuries and inauspicious circumstances of origin make him an inappropriate object of veneration and Buddhist refuge.<ref>Kay (2004:47)</ref>
{{blockquote|As the Gelug agent of the Tibetan government in ] (Khams) (Eastern Tibet), and in response to the Rimed movement that had originated and was flowering in that region, Phabongkha Rinpoche and his disciples employed repressive measures against non-Gelug sects. Religious artefacts associated with ] – who is revered as a "second Buddha" by Nyingma practitioners – were destroyed, and non-Gelug, and particularly Nyingma, monasteries were forcibly converted to the Gelug position. A key element of Phabongkha Rinpoche’s outlook was the cult of the protective deity Dorje Shugden, which he married to the idea of Gelug exclusivism and employed against other traditions as well as against those within the Gelug who had eclectic tendencies.{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=43}}}}


Pabongkhapa feared a decline of Gelug monasteries, and induced a revival movement, which promoted the Gelug as the only pure tradition. He regarded the practice of non-Gelug teachings by Gelug monks as a threat to the Gelug tradition, and opposed the influence of the other schools, especially the Nyingma.{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=47}} He coupled Dorje Shugden to Gelug exclusivism, using it against other traditions, and against Gelugpa's with eclectic tendencies.{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=43}} The main function of the deity was presented as "the protection of the Ge-luk tradition through violent means, even including the killing of its enemies."{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=47}}
According to Kay: "the position which defines Dorje Shugden as an enlightened being is both a marginal viewpoint and one of recent provenance... The likelihood is that it emerged gradually as the Dharma-protector grew in prominence. This belief seems to have been in place by the time the young Fourteenth Dalai Larna was introduced to the practice by Trijang Rinpoche prior to the exile of the Tibetan Buddhist community in 1959."<ref>Kay 1997 : 281 (The New Kadampa Tradition and the Continuity of Tibetan Buddhism in Transition (1997) by David Kay, Journal of Contemporary Religion 12:3 (October 1997), 277-293)</ref> <ref>Kay, David N. (2004). Tibetan and Zen Buddhism in Britain: Transplantation, Development and Adaptation - The New Kadampa Tradition (NKT), and the Order of Buddhist Contemplatives (OBC), London and New York, ISBN 0-415-29765-6, 230</ref> Also Nebesky-Wojkowitz defines Dorje Shugden as a worldly protector.<ref>de Nebesky-Wojkowitz, 1956: 4</ref> However, according to followers of Dorje Shugden, he has been considered as an enlightened being since the time of the Fifth ].


====Response by the 13th Dalai Lama====
According to Geshe ] (a proponent of Dorje Shugden, following the view of ]) and many other Gelugpa Lamas who rely upon Dorje Shugden, it is correct to consider Dorje Shugden as an emanation of Manjushri but not one who shows the aspect of a worldly being. He says that the form of Dorje Shugden reveals the complete stages of the path of ] and ], and such qualities are not possessed by the forms of worldly beings. He goes on to say that Dorje Shugden appears as a fully ordained ] to show that the practice of pure moral discipline is essential for those who wish to attain enlightenment.<ref>Kelsang Gyatso. (1997). ''Heart Jewel: The essential practices of Kadampa Buddhism''. London: Tharpa. pp. 115-116.</ref>
The abbot of ] and the ] were opposed to Pabongkapa's propitiation of Shugden.<ref group=web name="Dreyfus1" /><ref group=web name="Dreyfus2" />{{refn|group=note|Raimondo Bultrini: "But not everyone agreed with the decision to hold that ritual in the monastery dedicated to the guardian deity of the Dalai Lamas and the Tibetan government. Among these was the Abbot of Drepung Monastery, who immediately consulted Nechung, the State Oracle. The Oracle’s silence was more explicit than a thousand words. There could not be two protectors under the same roof, wrote the abbot to His Holiness, the Thirteenth Dalai Lama. A month had gone by since Phabongka Rinpoche had conferred the initiation at Drepung. From that day the practice of the gyalpo spread like oil on water among the young students in the colleges.
The Dalai Lama, aware of the risk of open conflict, decided to have Phabongka formally rebuked by a government functionary. Then he wrote to him personally, revealing how disconcerted he was by his behavior. A few days went by, and a messenger brought Phabongka’s response to the Potala, with a gold coin and a white kata. Phabongka apologized, saying it was his fault alone and that he had nothing to add in his defense: "What I have done is unjustifiable and in the future, as you have asked of me, I shall take your instructions to heart. I ask your forgiveness for what I have done and written."
The Dalai Lama responded to Phabongka’s apology with a second letter, which did not entirely mask his displeasure:
"There is much to be said about your words and deeds, in both in logistical and doctrinal terms, but I do not want to continue on this subject. Concerning your references to the practice of the refuge, first of all you are propitiating Shugden as a protector. And since these students now have a connection with you, the practice has notably spread at Drepung. Since the monastery was first founded by Jamyang Choejey, Nechung has been designated as guardian and protector of Drepung, and his oracle has expressed his great dissatisfaction to the abbot on several occasions, saying that appeasing Shugden has accelerated the degeneration of the Buddha’s teaching. This is the root of the problem. In particular, your search for the support of a worldly guardian to ensure benefits in this life is contrary to the principle of the taking of refuge. Therefore, it is contradictory to affirm, as you do "from the bottom of your heart", that what happened is only the fruit of your "confusion and ignorance", and that you were not aware of having "followed a wrongful path and led others onto it." Phabongka replied with apparent humility: "You have asked me why I am interested in this protector. I must explain that, according to my old mother, Shugden was a guardian for my family from the start, and that is why I have honored him. But now I want to say that I have repented and I have understood my mistake. I shall perform purification and promise with all my heart that in the future I will avoid propitiating, praying to, and making daily offerings . I admit to all the errors I have made, disturbing Nechung and contradicting the principle of the refuge, and I beg you, in your great heartfelt compassion, to forgive me and purify my actions."{{sfn|Bultrini|2013}}}} Restrictions on the practice of Shugden were implemented by the 13th Dalai Lama.<ref group=web name="Dreyfus2" /> Pabongkhapa apologized and promised not to engage in Shugden practices any more.<ref group=web name="Dreyfus1" />{{refn|group=note|name="Bultrini, Raimondo 2013"|Raimondo Bultrini: Phabongka said "I shall perform purification and promise with all my heart that in the future I will avoid propitiating, praying to, and making daily offerings to Shugden. I admit to all the errors I have made, disturbing Nechung and contradicting the principle of the refuge, and I beg you, in your great heartfelt compassion, to forgive me and purify my actions."{{sfn|Bultrini|2013}}}}


=== 1970s ===
Geshe ]'s view is also held by other ] Lamas past and present who are or were considered great masters, including: Kyabje ] (root Guru of many highly regarded ] Lamas of the early 20th century), Kyabje ] (junior tutor of the 14th Dalai Lama). Among those who practised Shugden in the Gelug school were not only the Dalai Lama but also Geshe Rabten, Kyabje Zong Rinpoche, Lama Yeshe (founder of the ]), and Tomo Geshe Rinpoche.{{Fact|date=December 2008}} Is is also said that some of the ]s (e.g. the 9th and 10th) practised Shugden.{{Fact|date=December 2008}} Trijang Rinpoche claims that the view that Dorje Shugden is an emanation of Manjushri has also been held by the ] and the ]. According to Trijang Rinpoche, the ] "enthroned Dorje Shugden as the principal Dharma Protector of the Gelug tradition"<ref> by Kyabje Trijang Dorje Chang. pp. 123-124. retrieved 2008-12-07</ref>.


====Publication of ''The'' ''Yellow Book''====
According to Von Bruck, the Fourteenth Dalai Lama, after examining Dorje Shugden based on three methodological devices (1) historical evidence, (2) political reason, (3) spiritual insight, changed his view and now considers Dorje Shugden to be a worldly spirit. Von Bruck concludes: "It is clear that by historical evidence the authenticity of that tradition on Shugden cannot be decided."<ref>von Brück, ''Canonicity and Divine Interference: The Tulkus and the Shugden-Controversy'', Charisma and Canon: Essays on the Religious History of the Indian Subcontinent Edited by Vasudha Dalmia, Angelika Malinar, and Martin Christof. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2001, ISBN-13: 978-0195666205</ref> According to Sara Chamberlain in the New Internationalist, in 1996 the Dalai Lama announced that worship of Dorje Shugden was banned and explained that the Tibetan state oracle, ], had advised him that the deity was a threat to his personal safety and the future of Tibet.<ref>Deity banned, Outrage as Dalai Lama denounces Dorje Shugden "http://www.newint.org/issue304/update.htm"</ref>. The Dalai Lama stated in 1996: <blockquote>
In 1975, ''The Yellow Book'', also known as ''The Oral Transmission of the Intelligent Father'',{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=49}} was published. It enumerates a series of stories that Zimey Rinpoche had heard informally from Trijang Rinpoche about ‘the many Ge-luk lamas whose lives are supposed to have been shortened by Shuk-den’s displeasure at their practicing Nying-ma teachings’.{{sfn|Dreyfus|1998}} The text asserts the pre-eminence of the Gelug school which is symbolised and safeguarded by Dorje Shugden, and presents a stern warning to those within the Gelug whose eclectic tendencies would compromise the school's purity.{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=49}} The book provoked angry reactions from non-Gelug traditions, triggering a bitter literary exchange that drew on ‘all aspects of sectarian rivalry’.{{sfn|Kapstein|1989}}
"All final decisions have been concluded only through divination."<ref>Address delivered by the Dalai Lama at the preparatory session of Tamdrin Yangsang and Sangdrub empowerments, March 21 1996</ref>{{Or|date=January 2009}}
</blockquote>


====Response by the 14th Dalai Lama====
According to the ]'s Dolgyal Research Committee, a government organization involved in this religious dispute, prominent opponents to the practice have included not only the 5th, 13th and current Dalai Lamas but also the 5th and 8th ], ], the 14th and 16th ]s among others.<ref> edited and compiled by The Dolgyal Research Committee. retrieved 2008-12-07</ref> However, these claims are denied by the followers of Dorje Shugden. For example, in 1921 the 13th Dalai Lama’s biography refers to Dorje Shugden as an enlightened Protector (jam mgon bstan srung pa) and explains that the 13th Dalai Lama subsequently restored the Potala and Ganden stupas as an offering to him.<ref>13th Dalai Lama’s biography, 1921</ref> There is also no evidence given for the claims that the ] were in opposition to the practice. The Fifth Dalai Lama started off in opposition but then changed his mind. Phelgye Ling monastery (now in Kathmandu) was transformed to a Gelug monastery by the 5th Dalai Lama, who gave the monastery a statue (about 20cm high) of Dorje Shugden riding on a black horse. The statue still exists in the monastery in Kathmandu.
] demonstration protest against the ]. Some German slogans translated are "You know that Dorje Shugden harms no being, please Dalai Lama stop spreading lies!" and "Dorje Shugden loves all Buddhist traditions, please don't lie!"]]
The ] publicly rejected ''The Yellow Book'', claiming that it could only damage the common cause of the Tibetan people because of its sectarian divisiveness.{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=49}} In a series of talks, he sought to undermine the status elevation of Dorje Shugden by reaffirming the centrality of traditional supramundane protectors of the Gelug tradition.{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=49}} He also vehemently rejected Dorje Shugden's associated sectarianism, emphasising that all the Tibetan traditions are ‘equally profound dharmas’ and defending the ‘unbiased and eclectic’ approach to Buddhist practice as exemplified by the ], ] and ] Dalai Lamas.{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=50}}


Scholar ] explains, "The Dalai Lama’s renunciation of Shugden in 1976 caused great discord within the Geluk community, where devotion to the deity remained strong among the Geluk hierarchy and among large factions of the refugee lay community; spirited defenses of his worship were written and published. Some went so far as to claim that the Dalai Lama was not the true Dalai Lama, that the search party had selected the wrong child forty years before."<ref>Prisoners of Shangri-La. Lopez, Donald. Page 191</ref>
], one of the teachers of the 14th Dalai Lama (one of his junior tutors), and, according to one account by the Dalai Lama, his "root Guru"<ref name="Dalai Lama p. 26"/> seen by some as "ne of the foremost Tibetan Buddhist masters of our time,"<ref> by the FPMT. retrieved 2008-12-07</ref> anticipating this kind of debate, refuted this point of view in his text on Dorje Shugden, ''Music Delighting the Ocean of Protectors'':


According to Georges Dreyfus, the sectarian elements of ''The'' ''Yellow Book'' were not unusual and do not "justify or explain the Dalai Lama's strong reaction."<ref group=web name="Dreyfus1" /> Instead, he traces back the conflict more on the exclusive/inclusive approach and maintain that to understand the Dalai Lama's point of view one has to consider the complex ritual basis for the institution of the Dalai Lamas, which was developed by the Great Fifth and rests upon "an eclectic religious basis in which elements associated with the Nyingma tradition combine with an overall Gelug orientation."<ref>Dreyfus 1998: 269</ref> This involves the promotion and practices of the Nyingma school. Kay reminds us, "hen traditions come into conflict, religious and philosophical differences are often markers of disputes that are primarily economic, material and political in nature."{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=41}}
<blockquote>
Furthermore, from the definitive point of view, that these holy beings were already fully enlightened innumerable ages ago, is clear if one examines the accounts of their lives, and if one were to say that a fully enlightened being could take birth as an ordinary gyalpo or tsen spirit, then one would be asserting that degeneration is possible from the state of full enlightenment or that someone could be both fully enlightened and an ordinary preta at the same time. Or else, one would have to say that the accounts of those great beings lives are worthless. A mountain of absurd consequences, previously non-existent distorted ideas, would have to be accepted.<ref> by Kyabje Trijang Dorje Chang. p. 9. retrieved 2008-12-07</ref>
</blockquote>


=== 1980s ===
Current-day Dorje Shugden practitioners give ten reasons why Dorje Shugden can be considered to be a fully enlightened Buddha.<ref>http://wisdombuddhadorjeshugden.blogspot.com/2008/12/ten-simple-reasons-why-dorje-shugden-is.html "Ten Simple Reasons why Dorje Shugden is a Buddha"</ref>
Bluck notes the activity regarding Dorje Shugden practice in the 80s: "In the early 1980s the Dalai Lama restricted reliance on Dorje Shugden to private rather than public practice. The tension this caused within the Gelug and wider Tibetan community may reflect some opposition to his ecumenical approach."<ref>{{cite book|last1=Bluck|first1=Robert|title=British Buddhism: Teachings, Practice and Development|url=https://archive.org/details/britishbuddhismt00bluc|url-access=limited|date=2006|publisher=Routledge|page=}}</ref>


===Protector of Gelugpa school=== === 1990s ===


====Initiations by the 14th Dalai Lama====
Kay and Dreyfus attribute the popularisation of the practice to Pabongka Rinpoche.<ref>Kay (2004:48)</ref> According to Dreyfus, Pabongka Rinpoche "replaced the protectors appointed by Je ] himself..." and that through Pabongkha Rinpoche's changes and claims, Dorje Shugden "has become the main Gelug protector replacing the traditional supra-mundane protectors of the Gelug tradition."<ref name=Dreyfus/> This is denied by followers of Dorje Shugden. For example, in the entire volume of rituals collected by the Mongolian Lobsang Tamdin (1867-1937AD), he documents the dissemination of the practice in Mongolia and Amdo, and describes Dorje Shugden as the Protector of Tsongkhapa without any mention of any of Pabongkha’s rituals, therefore he was not influenced by him. He also writes about the Shugden initiation that started from the Eighth Kirti reincarnation of Amdo Rongchen Kirti Lobsang Trinley (1849-1904AD), who describes Shugden as the Protector of Tsongkhapa.<ref>Lobsang Tamdin Volume of Rituals</ref>
With the urging of the other schools who have long been opposed to Shugden,{{refn|group=note|Raimondo bultrini: HHDL states "The previous Dudjom Rinpoche, one of the great Nyingmapa masters, once told me that Shugden was negative for the Tibetan government."{{sfn|Bultrini|2013}}}} and his senior Gelug tutor who always doubted the practice,{{refn|group=note|name="Kay, David 2004 p. 90"|David Kay: "Ling Rinpoche, who was from Drepung monastery, was not a devotee of Dorje Shugden, and at the time of the dispute he naturally sided with the Dalai Lama."{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=90}}}}{{refn|group=note|name="ReferenceA"|Raimondo Bultrini: HHDL states "That same day, when I told my senior tutor Ling Rinpoche, he confessed he was very happy, since he always had harbored doubts regarding the practice. He told me it certainly was the right decision...Ling Rinpoche raised a doubt with Phabongka that was shared by many others. "If we at Drepung start to worship Shugden, isn’t there a risk of a conflict between the two that could bring us harm? Nechung will not be happy", he said."{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=90}}}} the 14th Dalai Lama asked the increasing number of western Shugden practitioners who were newly being ] to refrain from attending his teachings.{{refn|group=note|name="huffingtonpost.com"|Robert Thurman: "In the late 80s', when certain individual lamas began to proselytize its cult, inducting even Western practitioners new to Buddhism, especially in England, he took the step of asking such persons to refrain from attending his initiations and associated advanced teachings, on the grounds that they were not following his advice and so should not take him as their teacher."{{sfn|Thurman|2013a}}}} George Chryssides, quoting Stephen Batchelor, states:
{{blockquote|Affairs came to a head in March 1996, when the Dalai Lama formally pronounced his opposition to Dorje Shugden, saying "It has become fairly clear that Dolgyal (i.e. Shugden) is a spirit of the dark forces." (Batchelor, 1998, p. 64) The Tibetan government in exile is said to have conducted house searches, demanding that people sign a declaration stating that they have abandoned Dorje Shugden practice (Batchelor, 1998, p. 64).<ref>Chryssides, George. Exploring New Religions. Page 239</ref>}}


====New Kadampa Tradition====
According to adherents, Dorje Shugden is an enlightened ] or Dharma Protector, which means that he protects the realizations of wisdom and compassion within the minds of practitioners.<ref>Heart Jewel, Tharpa Publications</ref>
The ], founded by ] in 1991, has continued the worship of ''Dorje Shugden''.{{sfn|Kay|2004}} Kelsang Gyatso regards his school to be the true continuation of the "pure" teachings of Je Tsongkhapa, rejecting the "inclusivism" of the Dalai Lama.{{sfnm|1a1=Kay|1y=2004|2a1=Lopez|2y=1998b}} ] notes that members of the New Kadampa Tradition, responded by trying
According to Nebresky-Wojkowitz Shugden is a mundane protector<ref>Nebesky-Wojkowitz (1998:4)</ref> whose followers proclaim that he will succeed ] (]) as the head of all ‘jig rten pa’i srung ma (worldly protectors) once the latter god advances into the rank of those guardian-deities who stand already outside the worldly spheres”<ref>Nebesky-Wojkowitz (1998:134)</ref>. According to Kay, followers of Dorje Shugden maintained "that the Tibetan government should turn its allegiance away from ], the State protector, to Dorje Shugden."<ref>Kay 1997 : 281</ref> According to ], such a shift would have given supporters of Dorje Shugden more political influence.<ref>Kay 2004 : 231, Interview with Stephen Batchelor</ref> According to Nebesky-Wojkowitz in the 1960 members of the Gelug sect "regard(ed) him as dutiful guardian of their temples and particularly the Ganden (dGa' ldan) monastery. In most temples of the Dge lugs pa one finds paintings and images of this dharmapala in the mgon khang, the room reserved for the worship of protectors of religion."<ref>Nebesky-Wojkowitz (1998:140)</ref>
{{blockquote|...to force their supposed mentor to adopt their perspective that the demonic spirit is an enlightened being, almost more important than the Buddha himself, and perhaps also rejoin their worship of it, or at least give them all his initiatory teachings in spite of their defiance of his best advice.{{sfn|Thurman|2013a}}}}


Martin Mills states that:
According to von Brück and Dreyfus the ] stopped Pabongkha Rinpoche from disseminating the practice since the Tibetan government argued that Shugden was in competition with ] and people should not take refuge in him.<ref name="info-buddhism.com"> by von Brück, Michael. retrieved 2008-12-07.</ref><ref name="dalailama.com"> by George Dreyfus. Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies. Vol., 21, no. 2 :227-270. retrieved 2008-12-08.</ref> According to Pabongkha Rinpoche's biographer, Pabongkha promised the ] not to propitiate Shugden any more.<ref name="dalailama.com"/>
{{blockquote|recent dispute within the Gelukpa Order over the status of the Dharma Protector Dorje Shugden have focused on claims by a breakaway order of the Gelukpa, the British-based New Kadampa Tradition, that Shugden is of Buddha status (most Gelukpa commentators place him as a worldly deity){{sfn|Mills|2003b|p=366}}}}


====DSRCS and SSC/WSS====
According to ] of the ], his root guru ], Pabongka Dechen Nyingpo (the Dalai Lama’s own guru’s root guru), Zong Rinpoche (from whom many FPMT students received the initiation of Shugden), and Gomo Rinpoche all promoted the practice of Dorje Shugden as a Dharma Protector, functioning to overcome obstacles. ] always did a Dorje Shugden puja to eliminate hindrances before giving courses.<ref> by Lama Zopa. p. 6. 2008-10-22. retrieved 2008-12-07.</ref>
In ], some protests and opposition were organised by the Dorje Shugden Religious and Charitable Society (DSRCS) with the support of the Shugden Supporters Community (SSC),<ref group=web> by Dorje Shugden Devotees Charitable and Religious Society and Shugden Supporters Community (Delhi), 1996-06-19, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>{{Better source needed|date=October 2009}} now called ].<ref group=web></ref>


In, 1996 the SSC attempted to obtain a statement from ] that the TGIE (specifically the 14th Dalai Lama) had violated ]. However, the AI replied that the SSC's allegations were as yet unsubstantiated.{{sfn|Lopez|1998|p=194}} Two years later, the AI stated in an official press release that complaints by Shugden practitioners fell outside its purview of "grave violations of fundamental human rights" (such as torture, the ], ], arbitrary detention or imprisonment, or unfair trials), adding that "while recognizing that a spiritual debate can be contentious, cannot become involved in debate on spiritual issues."<ref group=web>''Amnesty International's position on alleged abuses against worshippers of Tibetan deity Dorje Shugden'', AI Index 17/14/98, 1998-06, quoted in by David Van Biema (2008-07-18), retrieved 2009-10-31.</ref> In itself, the nuanced statement neither asserted nor denied the validity of the claims made against the TGIE, just that they were not actionable according to AI's mandate. <ref group=web></ref>{{sfn|Wilson|2003|p=57}}<ref group=web>Chandler, Jeannie M. (2009), p. 211</ref>
According to some sources, previous Gelugpa Lamas who relied upon Dorje Shugden before the time of Je Phabongkhapa include the 5th Dalai Lama, Kelsang Thubten Jigme Gyatso 1743-1811 (a tutor to the 9th Dalai Lama), Losang Thubten Wangchuk Jigme Gyatso 1775 – 1813 (head of the Gelugpa in Mongolia), Ngulchu Dharmabadra, the Indian master Shakya Shri Bhadra, the 11th Dalai Lama 1838 - 1856 (who installed Dorje Shugden as the Protector of the Gelugpa tradition), Gyara Tulku Rinpoche, Tomo Geshe Rinpoche (regarded by the 13th Dalai Lama as an emanation of Je Tsongkhapa), Serkong Rinpoche (regarded by the 13th Dalai Lama as Vajradhara), and Tagpo Kelsang Khedrub Rinpoche (the root Guru of Je Phabongkhapa)<ref>Ten Simple Reasons why Dorje Shugden is a Buddha </ref>, who wrote: <blockquote>


The DSRCS and Kundeling Lama filed a petition against the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) and the Dalai Lama, accusing them of harassment and maltreatment. On 5 April 2010, ] dismissed the petition, stating that allegations of violence and harassment were "vague averments" and that there as an "absence of any specific instances of any such attacks."<ref group=web> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140717195819/http://tibet.net/2010/04/21/delhi-high-court-dismisses-dorjee-shugden-devotees-charges/ |date=2014-07-17 }} 2010-04-10, retrieved 2010-04-29.</ref>
With deep faith I prostrate to you, Vajradhara Dorje Shugden. Although you have already attained the Buddha ground and engage in the twenty-seven deeds of a Buddha, you appear in various forms to help the Buddhadharma and sentient beings.<ref>Kelsang Gyatso. (1997). ''Heart Jewel: The essential practices of Kadampa Buddhism''. London: Tharpa. p. 75.</ref>
</blockquote>


====Murder of Lobsang Gyatso and two students====
===Origin story===
On February 4, 1997, the principal of the Buddhist School of Dialectics, ], was murdered along with two of his students in ] .{{sfn|Lopez|1998|p=195-196}} Kay notes "The subsequent investigation by the Indian police linked the murders to the Dorje Shugden faction of the exiled Tibetan community."{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=212}}
The emergence of the practice is strongly related to Tulku Drapga Gyaltsen, a contemporary of the ] about whom exist different stories.<ref name="info-buddhism.com"/>


In a small 1978 pamphlet, Lobsang Gyatso alluded to a "knotless heretic teacher", which some people took as referring to ] and his advocacy of Shugden.{{sfn|Dreyfus|2003|p=301}} According to Lobsang Gyatso's biographer, ], many ]s and ]s were outraged over his criticism:
According to von Brück, there is little documented historical evidence before the beginning of the 19th century and different orally-transmitted versions of his origins contradict each other.<ref name="info-buddhism.com"/>
{{blockquote|How could a nobody like Lobsang Gyatso, who was neither from an aristocratic family nor the head of a Tibetan region, indeed not even a full graduate of a religious university, dare to criticize in print an important establishment figure? Georges Dreyfus at the time remarked that in pre-1959 Gen-la would have been killed outright for his temerity. Many in the Tibetan community ostracized Gen-la, even though the Dalai Lama had already by that time begun speaking publicly against the Shugden cult. Even the Dalai Lama appeared to distance himself from Gen-la. "He is headstrong and his lack of sensitivity is making trouble", seemed to be his attitude towards Gen-la at the time.{{sfn|Sparham|1998|p=321}}}}


Georges Dreyfus added, "Despite being hurt by the polemical attack, Tri-jang Rin-po-che made it clear that violence was out of the question. Gradually, tempers cooled down and the incident was forgotten—or so it seemed."{{sfn|Dreyfus|2003|p=303}}
Von Brück traces the root of the link between the death of Tulku Drakpa Gyaltsen and the worship of Dorje Shugden back to "the power struggles of the 5th Dalai Lama and the successful centralization of power in his hands after the death of the Mongol Gushri Khan."<ref name="info-buddhism.com"/> According to Mullin,<ref>Mullin, G. H., & Shepherd, V. M. (2001). ''The fourteen Dalai Lamas: A sacred legacy of reincarnation''. Santa Fe, NM: Clear Light. p. 208</ref> the soul of the murdered monk Dragpa Gyaltsen wandered after his death for some time as a disturbed spirit, who created trouble for the people of ]. The 5th Dalai Lama tried to "exorcise and pacify" him by first asking Nyingma shamans to subdue him, but when they failed he asked Gelugpa shamans who were finally successful. By these measures, the spirit of the diseased Lama was "pacified and transformed" into the Dharma Protector Dorje Shugden. According to Mumford, the 5th Dalai Lama unsuccessfully tried to subjugate Dorje Shugden through a fire exorcism and "invited the still-wandering spirit to become a ] of the Gelugpa order, with result that Shugs-ldan became one of the most popular Srungmas in Tibet. With the encouragement of local Lamas, kin groups all over Tibet took on Shugs-ldan as their lineage guardian."<ref>Mumford, S. (1989). ''Himalayan dialogue: Tibetan Lamas and Gurung shamans in Nepal''. New directions in anthropological writing. Madison, Wis: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 126.</ref> Mullin continues, saying that the practice was later adopted by "numerous Gelugpa monks who disapproved of the 5th Dalai Lama's manner of combining ]pa and ]pa doctrines" and that the 5th Dalai Lama tried to discourage the practice, but "it caught on in many monasteries". According to Mullin, "The practice continued over the generations to follow, and eventually became one of the most popular Protector Deity practices within the Gelugpa school." The practice became even more popular during the late 1800s. During that time, Dorje Shugden "became an all pervasive monthly practice within almost all provincial Gelugpa monasteries, and was especially popular with Gelugpa aristocratic families."


In June 2007, the Times stated that ] had issued a ] to China for extraditing two of the alleged killers, Lobsang Chodak and Tenzin Chozin.<ref group=web>{{cite news|last1=Macartney|first1=Jane|title=Interpol on trail of Buddhist killers|url=http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/interpol-on-trail-of-buddhist-killers/story-e6frg6so-1111113803569|access-date=3 March 2014|work=The Australian|date=21 June 2007}}</ref> ] adds that the alleged killers had their origin within China as well.{{sfn|Thurman|2013a}} The ''Seattle Times'' reported, "The two men suspected of stabbing their victims are believed to have fled India. Five others, all linked to the Dorje Shugden Society in New Delhi, were questioned for months about a possible conspiracy. No one has been charged."<ref group=web>{{cite news|last1=Max|first1=Arthur|title=Dalai Lama Fighting Ghost In Religious Dispute|url=https://archive.seattletimes.com/archive/19970821/2555891/dalai-lama-fighting-ghost-in-religious-dispute|access-date=22 May 2009|work=Seattle Times|date=21 August 1997}}</ref>
According to Tagpo Kelsang Khedrub, although the Fifth Dalai Lama and others tried to destroy Dorje Shugden, they were not able to because Shugden is enlightened:<blockquote>
Then, although four undisputed powerful Tantrikas with concentration, began wrathful rituals to strike you down, through the power of having completed Guhyasamaja's two stages, you would not be silenced, and showed signs of heroism; praise to you!<ref>Tagpo Kelsang Khedrub Rinpoche praise of Dorje Shugden, ''Infinite Aeons'', published??, year??</ref>{{page number}}
</blockquote>


] denied the involvement of any of his followers in the murder, and condemned the killings.<ref group=web name="NewsweekApril281997">Clifton, Tony. . Newsweek. 1997-04-28. Retrieved 2009-04-10.</ref> Matthews notes that "In spite of speculation, no connection has been found between New Kadampa Tradition and the murders in Dharamsala" <ref>Matthews, Carol. New Religions. Infobase Publishing. 2009. Page 142</ref>
According to some Gelug Lamas, there is evidence to show that the ] realized he was mistaken in considering Dorje Shugden a spirit, and then composed a prayer praising Dorje Shugden as a Buddha<ref> by the 5th Dalai Lama. retrieved 2008-12-07.</ref> and crafted a statue<ref> (about mid-way down the page). retrieved 2008-12-07.</ref> to show his respect for Dorje Shugden. However, 14th Dalai Lama has denied that the 5th Dalai Lama composed such a prayer.<ref> by the Dalai Lama. 1997-10-??. retrieved 2008-12-07.</ref> Also von Brück denies the historical evidence of such a claim, stating "The problem is that this position has no historical evidence, neither in the biography of the 5th Dalai Lama or elsewhere."<ref name="info-buddhism.com"/>


=== 2000s-present===
According to McCune, the story about his being a wandering spirit was said by followers to be disseminated by those who murdered Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen, not by his followers who viewed him as the reincarnation of a highly realized being.<ref>Tales of Intrigue from Tibet's Holy City, the Historical Underpinnings of a Modern Buddhist Crisis by Lindsay G. McCune, Florida State University College of Arts and Sciences</ref> According to ]:


====Attempted murder====
<blockquote>
] revealed an attempt to ] the ] with murder:
Yet all this talk is nothing but babbling speculation. Why? Because this great guardian of the teachings is well known to be the precious supreme emanation from Drepung monastery'supper house, Dragpa Gyaltsen, arising in a wrathful aspect. The proof is unmistaken. Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen, as is taught in the lineage, was the final birth in a reincarnation lineage that included the Mahasiddha Birwawa, the great Kashmiri Pandit Shakya Shri, the omniscient Buton, Duldzin Dragpa Gyaltsen, Panchen Sonam Dragpa, and so forth; this is proven by valid scriptural quotation and reasoning. These great beings, from a definitive point of view, were already fully enlightened, and even to common appearances, every one of them was a holy being that attained high states of realization. What worse karma could there be than denying this and asserting that he was born in the preta (spirit) realm?<ref> by Trijang Rinpoche (circa 1967), p. ???.</ref>
</blockquote>


{{blockquote|In my own '']'', I have recently witnessed a kind of factionalism, and I have discovered that one person in particular was planning an evil conspiracy. This plan was to murder my assistant, Tharchin, and to implicate His Holiness’s government-in-exile with this odious crime If he had succeeded in his plan, it would have been a cause of great trouble for the labrang, as well as a cause of disgrace to the Tibetan government and His Holiness the Dalai Lama.{{sfn|Bultrini|2013|p=311–312}}}}
==Origins of the dispute==


Trijang Chocktrul Rinpoche's declaration disturbed the image of a peaceful community, and the polemics against the Dalai Lama diminished for a long while.{{sfn|Bultrini|2013|p=311–312}}
{{cquote|The Shugden dispute represents a battleground of Views on what is meant by religious and cultural freedom.<ref>Mills, Martin A., ''Human Rights in Global Perspective'', p. 65, Routledge, ISBN 0-415-30410-5</ref>}}


====Schism within the Gelug school====
Historically the ] tradition, founded by ], has never been a completely unified order.{{Fact|date=December 2008}} Internal conflicts and divisions are a part of it and are based on philosophical, political, regional, economic, and institutional interests{{Fact|date=December 2008}} and usually connected with the institution of the Dalai Lama. In the 17th century the Gelug order became politically dominant in central Tibet. This was through the institutions of the ]s. Although he is not the head of the Gelug school &mdash; the head is the ], the abbot of ] &mdash; the Dalai Lama is the highest incarnate Lama of the Gelug school, comparable to the position of the ] in the ] school of ].{{Fact|date=December 2008}}
The Gelugpa school has three great monasteries, namely ], ], and ]. In 2008, the Dorje Shugden controversy led to formal ] within the Gelug school. ''Pomra Khangtsen'', one of the sixteen sections of Sera monastery, legally separated itself in India from the rest of Sera, continuing as "Serpom Monastic University" at ]. Also in 2008, a section of Ganden Shartse at ] similarly separated itself from Ganden and is now known as "Shar Ganden Monastery".<ref group=web name=DH01>{{cite web|title=Tibetan crisis forces govt to expel Chinese journalists|website=] | author=Deccan Herald News Service |quote=The Serpom Monastic University at Bylakuppe and Shar Ganden monastery in Mundgod are among the main centres of the Dorje Shugden sect in India.| date=2016-07-26 |url=http://www.deccanherald.com/content/560217/tibetan-crisis-forces-govt-expel.html| access-date=2016-07-30}}</ref> In these institutions, the monks continue to worship Dorje Shugden as well as follow traditional curricula<ref group=web name=SerpomCurriculum>{{cite web |url= http://serpommonastery.org/monasticcurriculum.html|title=Serpom:Curriculum |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |website=Serpom Monastic University }}</ref> and other religious practices of their parent institutions. A few smaller Gelug monasteries have affiliated themselves with these two monasteries rather than with mainstream Gelug.


The present abbot of Serpom is Kyabje Yongyal and its acting abbot is Jampa Khetsun.<ref group=web name=SerpomAsmin>{{cite web |url= http://serpommonastery.org/monasticadministrators.html|title=Serpom:Monastic Administrators |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |website=Serpom Monastic University }}</ref> The present abbot of Shar Ganden is Lobsang Jinpa.<ref group=web name=SharGandenAbbott>{{cite web |url=http://shargadenpa.org/throneholder/venerable-abbot |title=Shar Ganden Monastery: Venerable Abbott |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> }}</ref>
===Eclecticism vs. Orthodoxy===


====Protests====
Georges Dreyfus and other researchers,{{Who|date=December 2008}} like David Kay,{{where|date=December 2008}} trace back the conflict more on the exclusive/inclusive approach and maintains that to understand the Dalai Lama's point of view one has to consider the complex ritual basis for the institution of the Dalai Lamas, which was developed by the Great Fifth and rests upon "an eclectic religious basis in which elements associated with the Nyingma tradition combine with an overall Gelug orientation"<ref>Dreyfus 1998: 269</ref> This involves the promotion and practices of the Nyingma school. The ] was criticized by and was treated in a hostile manner by conservative elements of the Gelug monastic establishment for doing this and for supporting Nyingma practitioners. The same happened when the 14th Dalai Lama started to encourage the devotion to ], central to the Nyingmas, and when he introduced Nyingma rituals at his personal ] (], ]). Whilst the 14th Dalai Lama started to encourage the devotion to ] for the supposed purpose of unifying the Tibetans (perhaps by bringing the four traditions into one under his rule)<ref>Shugden Society, H.H. the Dalai Lama's Words in the Mirror of Reality </ref> and somehow "to protect Tibetans from danger",<ref>Dreyfus 1998: 262</ref> the "more exclusively orientated segments of the Gelug boycotted the ceremonies", and in that context the ''Yellow Book'' was published.
Hundreds of western Shugden practitioners have staged numerous demonstrations against the Dalai Lama, most recently in 2015 when he opened the ]<ref group=web name="BBC" /><ref> - '']'' 29 June 2018</ref> and in Cambridge, and 2014 in ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref group=web name=reuters20140222>{{cite web |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-dalailama-protests-idUSBREA1L17O20140222 |title=Buddhist faction protests Dalai Lama as he visits U.S|author=Laila Kearney|date=22 Feb 2014 |website=Reuters |access-date=28 July 2014}}</ref>
<ref group=web>{{cite news |url=http://www.dailycal.org/2014/02/23/shugden-buddhists-protest-dalai-lamas-visit-berkeley/ |title=Shugden Buddhists protest during Dalai Lama's visit to Berkeley |author= Kathleen Tierney |date=24 Feb 2014 |newspaper=Daily Californian |access-date=28 July 2014}}</ref>
<ref group=web>{{cite news |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/religion/protesters-denounce-the-dalai-lama-as-a-dictator/2014/03/06/5f758972-a57c-11e3-b865-38b254d92063_story.html |title=Protesters denounce the Dalai Lama as a 'dictator' |author= Lauren Markoe |author2=Religion New Services LLC|date=6 March 2014 |newspaper=The Washington Post |access-date=28 July 2014}}</ref>
<ref group=web>{{cite web |url=http://theforeigner.no/pages/news/buddhists-protest-dalai-lama-norway-visit-in-their-hundreds/ |title=Demonstratie tegen Dalai Lama in Rotterdam|author=Michael Sandelson |date=8 May 2014 |publisher=The Foreigner |access-date=28 July 2014}}</ref>
<ref group=web>{{cite web |url=http://boeddhistischdagblad.nl/29770-demonstratie-tegen-dalai-lama-rotterdam/ |title=Demonstratie tegen Dalai Lama in Rotterdam |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |website=/boeddhistischdagblad.nl |language=nl |publisher=Boeddhistisch Dagblad (Buddhist Newspaper) |access-date=28 July 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140720014454/http://boeddhistischdagblad.nl/29770-demonstratie-tegen-dalai-lama-rotterdam/ |archive-date=20 July 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


In response, the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) published different statements and corrections to the protesters' claims.<ref group=web>{{cite web |url=http://tibet.net/dolgyal-shugden/kashag-statement-may-2014/ |title=Shugden Followers' Baseless Allegations – A Rejoinder from the Central Tibetan Administration |access-date=12 December 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141222012807/http://tibet.net/dolgyal-shugden/kashag-statement-may-2014/ |archive-date=22 December 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref group=web>{{cite web |url=http://tibet.net/dolgyal-shugden/ |title=Dolgyal (Shugden) |access-date=12 December 2014}}</ref> They also posted two lists of Tibetan participants of the protests<ref group=web name="protest1">{{Cite web |url=http://tibet.net/2014/05/22/list-of-dolgyal-followers-who-protested-against-his-holiness-the-dalai-lama-in-us-and-europe/ |title=Central Tibetan Administration (2014), ''Updated: List of Dolgyal followers who protested against His Holiness the Dalai Lama in US and Europe'' |access-date=2014-08-10 |archive-date=2014-05-29 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140529152850/http://tibet.net/2014/05/22/list-of-dolgyal-followers-who-protested-against-his-holiness-the-dalai-lama-in-us-and-europe/ |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref group=web name="protest2">{{Cite web |url=http://tibet.net/2014/05/30/list-of-dolgyal-followers-who-protested-against-his-holiness-the-dalai-lama-in-us-and-europe-updated/ |title=Central Tibetan Administration (2014), ''List of Dolgyal followers who protested against His Holiness the Dalai Lama in US and Europe (Updated)'' |access-date=2014-08-10 |archive-date=2014-06-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140601211701/http://tibet.net/2014/05/30/list-of-dolgyal-followers-who-protested-against-his-holiness-the-dalai-lama-in-us-and-europe-updated/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> and a declaration by former ] members and ex-practitioners of Dorje Shugden.<ref group=web>{{cite web |url=http://tibet.net/dolgyal-shugden/declaration-concerning-the-demonstrations-against-his-holiness-the-dalai-lama-2/ |title=Declaration concerning the demonstrations against His Holiness the Dalai Lama |access-date=12 December 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141222012811/http://tibet.net/dolgyal-shugden/declaration-concerning-the-demonstrations-against-his-holiness-the-dalai-lama-2/ |archive-date=22 December 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref> ] also condemned the protests, stating in February 2015, "The way group has been denigrating the Dalai Lama is an affront to the Tibetan people and is causing great damage to the broader Tibetan issue."<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.savetibet.org/the-international-campaign-for-tibets-statement-on-the-shugden-demonstration-in-washington-d-c/ | title=The International Campaign for Tibet's statement on the Shugden demonstration in Washington D.C| date=2015-02-04}}</ref>
] states that "The Dalai Lama is trying to modernize the Tibetans’ political vision and trying to undermine the factionalism. He has the dilemma of the liberal: do you tolerate the intolerant?"<ref>The Guardian, London, 6 July 1996, Shadow boxing on the path to Nirvana by Madeleine Bunting</ref> Shugden supporters assert that it is the Dalai Lama who is being intolerant and adhering to a theocratic model of government<ref>Cincinnati City Beat - Tibet Fest supports endangered tradition
By Gregory Flannery | Posted 09/18/2008 </ref> by banning their 400-year old religious practice.<ref>Why is the Dalai Lama suppressing religious freedom? </ref>


==Views==
===The Yellow Book===


===Views of opponents of ''Dorje Shugden'' practice===
The controversy -- that is, the Dalai Lama and others pitting themselves against Shugden practitioners -- surfaced within the Tibetan exile community during the 1970s.<ref name=autogenerated9>Mills, Martin A, Human Rights in Global Perspective, Routelidge ISBN 0-415-30410-5, page 56</ref> Zemey Rinpoche published the ''Yellow Book'', which included cautionary tales passed down by Pabongkha Rinpoche and ] of 23 members of the Gelugpa sect who also practiced Nyingma teachings and were supposedly "killed" by Shugden.<ref name=autogenerated9 /> According to Mumford: Dorje Shugden is "extremely popular, but held in awe and feared among Tibetans because he is highly punitive."<ref>Mumford 1989:125-126</ref> After the publication of the ''Yellow Book'', the current Dalai Lama expressed his opinion in several closed teachings that the practice should be stopped, although at that time he made no general public statement.


====Ling Rinpoche====
The ''Yellow Book'', however, is not believed by the majority of Dorje Shugden practitioners and not taken literally by any. It is considered by them to be a collection of superstitious or cautionary tales.<ref>Setting the Record Straight on Pico Iyer's book </ref> Geshe ] stated in 1996: "Because the Dalai Lama believed these superstitions, people also believed them, and this is how the present problem arose."<ref> by Geshe Kelsang Gyatso, 1996-12-19, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>
], who was the Ganden Tripa and senior Gelug tutor to the 14th Dalai Lama, was opposed to Shugden as he hailed from Drepung Monastery.{{refn|group=note|name="Kay, David 2004 p. 90"}}{{refn|group=note|name="ReferenceA"}}


===Use of oracles=== ====Views of the 14th Dalai Lama====
The 14th Dalai Lama himself said in 2008, that he never used the word "ban", but "he strongly discourages Tibetan Buddhists"<ref group=web></ref> in practicing Shugden and "restricting a form of practice that restricts others’ religious freedom is actually a protection of religious freedom. So in other words, negation of a negation is an affirmation".<ref group=web>, Madison, Wisconsin, July, 2008, retrieved 03/11/2014.</ref> The advice of the 14th Dalai Lama was approved by the ]<ref group=web></ref> and the Parliament in exile<ref group=web></ref> in 1996. It was then gradually implemented into a ban starting from 1997 by the ] including enforcement measures like imposing all spiritual masters to stop worshipping Shugden "in the interest of the Dalai Lama and Tibetan Independence" or urging all other Tibetan organizations and communities to expel anyone who venerates Shugden.<ref group=web></ref>
According to von Brück,<ref>von Brück, Michael (2001), in ''Charisma and Canon: Essays on the Religious History of the Indian Subcontinent'', New Delhi: Oxford University Press</ref> the ] has applied three methodological devices or arguments for investigating the status of Dorje Shugden: historical evidence, political reason, and spiritual insight. However, the belief that Dorje Shugden is a threat to the Dalai Lama and to Tibet is directly attributable to an ] in a trance.<ref name="newint.org"> by Sara Chamberlain, The New Internationalist, vol. 304, 1998, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>


Several reasons for the 14th Dalai Lama's stance have been given. According to ],
According to Pico Iyer, the Dalai Lama uses both his Cabinet and oracles in a balance of the "visible and invisible worlds."<ref>Pico Iyer, Open Road, The Global Journey of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama</ref> The Dalai Lama uses the Tibetan state oracle ] for matters of both religion and politics<ref>''Infallible Prophecies of the Tibetan Government Oracles'', published by the Department of Religion and Culture of the exile government, Dharamsala, 1996</ref> but stated that it "is not to say that I rely solely on the oracle's advice. I do not. I seek his opinion in the same way as I seek the opinion of my Cabinet and just as I seek the opinion of my own conscience."<ref>Freedom in Exile: Autobiography of the Dalai Lama by Dalai Lama XIV</ref>
{{blockquote|The current Dalai Lama, seeking to combat the ancient, virulent sectarianisms operative in such quarters, has strongly discouraged the worship of the "protector" deity known as Dorje Shugden, because one of its functions has been to force conformity to the ] sect (with which the Dalai Lama himself is most closely associated) and to assert power over competing sects.{{sfn|Makransky|2000|p=20}}}}


In 1996 the Dalai Lama announced that worship of Dorje Shugden was banned and explained that his oracle, Nechung, had advised him that the deity was a threat to his personal safety and the future of Tibet.<ref name="newint.org"/> According to Kapstein, the 14th Dalai Lama is "focused upon the role of Shugden as a militantly sectarian protector of the Gelukpa order, and the harm that has been done to Tibetan sectarian relations by the cult's more vociferous proponents."{{sfn|Kapstein|2000|p=143}}


In Freedom in Exile, the Dalai Lama himself points out what others may consider the pitfalls of using such a methodology to make political decisions: According to Dreyfus, the 14th Dalai Lama stance stems from his favoring the traditional Gelug traditions and protectors rather than Shugden:
{{blockquote|n this dispute the Dalai Lama’s position does not stem from his Buddhist modernism and from a desire to develop a modern nationalism, but from his commitment to another protector, Nechung, who is said to resent Shukden his opposition to Shukden is motivated by his return to a more traditional stance in which this deity is seen as incompatible with the vision of the tradition (the "clan") represented by the Fifth Dalai Lama.<ref group=web>{{cite journal|last1=Dreyfus|first1=Georges|title=Are We Prisoners of Shangrila? The Shukden Affair and Buddhist Modernism|journal=Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies|date=October 2005|volume=1|page=21|url=http://www.thlib.org/collections/texts/jiats/#jiats=/01/dreyfus/b3/#ixzz0T1qwKncA|language=en}}</ref>}}
<blockquote>
"For hundreds of years now, it has been traditional for the Dalai Lama, and the Government, to consult Nechung during the New Year festivals. In addition, he might well be called upon at other times if either have specific queries. I myself have dealings with him several times a year. This may sound far-fetched to twentieth-century western readers. Even some Tibetans, mostly those who consider themselves 'progressive', have misgivings about my continued use of this ancient method of intelligence gathering." <ref>''Freedom in Exile'', His Holiness the Dalai Lama</ref>
</blockquote>


===Views of Shugden practitioners===
==The political dimension==
Dorje Shugden worshippers say the ban and its implementation are in direct conflict with the proposed constitution of a free ], laid down by the Dalai Lama in 1963. The constitution states that all religious denominations are equal before the law, and every Tibetan shall have the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion. But when Dorje Shugden worshippers challenged the ban on these grounds, the TGIE responded: "Concepts like democracy and freedom of religion are empty when it comes to the well-being of the Dalai Lama and the common cause of Tibet."<ref name="newint.org"/> ] of the ] explains that the main reason he stopped the practice of Dorje Shugden himself and among his students was to support the Dalai Lama's political efforts on behalf of Tibet.<ref> by Lama Zopa Rinpoche, pp. 3, 6</ref> Brendan O'Neill argues that the extreme idolization of the Dalai Lama by his followers only serves to undermine democracy in a future free Tibet.<ref> by Brendan O'Neill, The Guardian, 2008-03-06, retrieved 2008-12-06</ref> Ursula Bernis commented that second-guessing any pronouncement made by the Dalai Lama is "sacrilege
among religious Tibetans."<ref>Dalai Lama, Lamrim teachings given 1996-03-19, quoted in by Ursula Bernis, p. 55 (Eulogy - page 21), retrieved 2008-12-06</ref>


====Kelsang Gyatso====
The Dalai Lama claims that Dorje Shugden conflicts with government-approved Dharma Protectors,<ref>Dalai Lama, Lamrim teachings given 1996-03-19, quoted in by Ursula Bernis, p. 54 (Eulogy - page 20), retrieved 2008-12-06</ref> so ] asked one of the Tibetan government's ], Tsultrim Tenzin, whether there had been any parliamentary debate about Dorje Shugden. He replied that there had been no debate simply because there was no opposition, adding "We do not have any doubt about Dalai Lama's decisions. We do not think he is a human being. He's a supreme human being and he is god."<ref>, Al Jazeera's People & Power, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> For this reason, Richard Wilson argues that the TGIE is a theocracy which restricts religious freedom in order to establish a "national homogeneity of belief."<ref name=RW>Human Rights in Global Perspective; ed Richard Wilson, published by Routelidge Curzon, ISBN 0-415-30410-5</ref>.
In an interview with scholar Donald Lopez on the controversy, Kelsang Gyatso explains:
{{blockquote|We believe that Dorje Shugden is a buddha who is also a dharmapala. Problems have arisen because of someone’s view. So although we say the "Dorje Shugden problem" in reality this is a human problem, not a Dorje Shugden problem. This is not a fault of Buddha-dharma, not a fault of Tibetan Buddhism, or even a fault of Tibetan people in general. This is a particular person’s wrong view. He can keep this view, of course, but forcing other people to follow this is not right. For this reason, nowadays we are showing many problems to the world. We are ashamed and sorry that this causes the reputation of Buddhists in general to be damaged. It is not a general Buddhist problem, but a specific problem within Tibetan Buddhism.{{sfn|Lopez|1998b}}}}


In the interview, Kelsang Gyatso states:
Younger Tibetans who view the Dalai Lama, not as an omnipotent god but simply as the Tibetan leader, are concerned with how the ban has entered the political sphere, with Tibetan government agencies, including the Prime Minister, being involved in implementing the ban in religious establishments.<ref>, Mountain Phoenix over Tibet blog, 2008-02-22, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> The enforced ban has even spread to Europe. For example, in ], the assembly of elected Tibetan people's deputies (thunmi) passed a "Dholgyal resolution" which, in effect, calls for singling out pro-Shugden Tibetans living in Switzerland.<ref>, Mountain Phoenix over Tibet blog, 2008-10-04, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>
{{blockquote|Of course we believe that every Nyingmapa and Kagyupa have their complete path. Not only Gelugpa. I believe that Nyingmapas have a complete path. Of course, Kagyupas are very special. We very much appreciate the example of ] and ] . Milarepa showed the best example of guru devotion. Of course the Kagyupas as well as the Nyingmapas and the Sakyapas, have a complete path to enlightenment.{{sfn|Lopez|1998b}}}}


According to Kelsang Gyatso,
===China===
{{blockquote|Dorje Shugden always helps, guides, and protects pure and faithful practitioners by granting blessings, increasing their wisdom, fulfilling their wishes, and bestowing success on all their virtuous activities. Dorje Shugden does not help only Gelugpas; because he is a Buddha he helps all living beings, including non-Buddhists.{{sfn|Gyatso|2002}}}}


According to David Kay, Kelsang Gyatso departs from Pabongkhapa and Trijang Rinpoche by stating that Dorje Shugden's appearance is enlightened, rather than worldly.{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=101-102}} According to Kay, "Geshe Kelsang takes the elevation of Dorje Shugden’s ontological status another step further, emphasising that the deity is enlightened in both essence and appearance."{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=101-102}} He quotes Kelsang Gyatso on Dorje Shugden's appearance: "Some people believe that Dorje Shugdan is an emanation of ] who shows the aspect of a worldly being, but this is incorrect. Even Dorje Shugdan’s form reveals the complete stages of the path of Sutra and Tantra, and such qualities are not possessed by the forms of worldly beings."{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=101-102}} According to Kay, Kelsang Gyatso downplays the oracle of Shugden, since it conflicts with his notion of Shugden being a ]:
According to ], analysts have accused ] of exploiting any dispute for political ends.<ref>, BBC News, 2006-05-10, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>
{{blockquote|he oracle may have been marginalised by Geshe Kelsang because his presence raised a doctrinal ambiguity for the NKT. According to traditional Tibetan teachings, none of the high-ranking supramundane protective deities ‘would condescend to interfere with more or less mundane affairs by speaking through the mouth of a medium’.{{sfn|Nebesky-Wojkowitz|1956|p=409}} The notion of oracular divination may thus have been problematised for Geshe Kelsang in light of his portrayal of Dorje Shugden as a fully enlightened being.{{sfn|Kay|2004|p=102}}}}


===Third-party views===
] reported on their documentary ''The Dalai Lama's Demons'' that it is taboo to disagree with the Dalai Lama, and to do this incurs the label of Chinese sympathizer.<ref>, France 24 International News, 2008-08-08, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> Meindert Gotter claimed that any criticism of the Dalai Lama is immediately labeleld as being pro-China, which effectively makes the dissenter an outcast in Tibetan society.<ref> by Meindert Gorter, The Faith Column blog, Newstatesman, 2008-08-29, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>
</blockquote>


====Dorje Shugden Practitioners====
According to PK Dey, a human-rights lawyer from Delhi, Dorje Shugden worshippers are suffering harassment from the Dalai Lama's followers and his government, citing door-to-door searches and ] as examples.<ref name="newint.org"/> The Dalai Lama himself sanctioned such behavior by saying, "It will be the last resort if have to knock on doors."<ref>Dalai Lama, Lamrim teachings given 1996-03-19, quoted in by Ursula Bernis, p. 54 (Eulogy - page 20), retrieved 2008-12-06</ref>
According to Dreyfus, "The irony is that Shuk-den is presented by his followers as the protector of the Ge-luk (dge lugs) school, of which the Dalai Lama is the (de facto) leader."<ref group=web name="Dreyfus1" />


According to Buddhist professor and Nyingma teacher John Markansky:
==The controversy in the 1990's==
{{blockquote|ome Tibetan monks who now introduce Westerners to practices centred on a native Tibetan deity, without informing them that one of its primary functions has been to assert hegemony over rival sects! Western followers of a few dGe lugs pa monks who worship that deity, lacking any critical awareness of its sectarian functions in Tibet, have recently followed the Dalai Lama to his speaking engagements to protest his strong stance (for non-sectarianism) in the name of their "religious freedom" to promulgate, now in the West, an embodiment of Tibetan sectarianism. If it were not so harmful to persons and traditions, this would surely be one of the funniest examples of the cross-cultural confusion that lack of critical reflection continues to create.{{sfn|Makransky|2000|p=20}}}}


====New Kadampa Tradition / Western Shugden Society claims====
In 1996 the Dalai Lama banned the practice among his own students. On May 8, 1996 in a public address in ], the Dalai Lama said, "It has been twenty years since I first mentioned the Dorje Shugden public restriction". Also, in an address on May 5, 1996, the Dalai Lama said, "It may have been about ten years ago. While giving a ] teaching at Drepung, I once gave my reasons for issuing the ban."<ref>''Select Addresses of His Holiness the Dalai Lama on the Issue of Propitiating Protector Deities'', Sherig Parkhang, Dharamsala, 1996-07-10, p. 175</ref> And "In this way came the reasons, on account of which I have issued the ban in recent times."
Scholar Jane Ardley explains the development of the claims of the WSS:
{{blockquote| Worship of this figure is especially popular in eastern Tibet, and the present Dalai Lama prayed to Dorje Shugden for many years. However in 1976 the Dalai Lama announced he was advising against the practice because it was promoting sectarianism, which could potentially damage the Tibetan independence movement. Twenty years later, in 1996, the Dalai Lama went further and announced that members of both government departments and monasteries under the control of the Tibetan exile administration were forbidden from worshipping the spirit because the ‘practice fosters religious intolerance and leads to the degeneration of Buddhism into a cult of spirit worship’. This led to a massive outcry from Shugden supporters, particularly in Britain. The Dalai Lama was accused of religious intolerance and provided an opportunity that was not missed by Beijing, who used the dispute as a further reason to denounce the Dalai Lama.<ref>{{Citation | last =Ardley | first =Jane | year =2002 | title =The Tibetan Independence Movement: Political, Religious and Gandhian Perspectives | place =London | publisher =RoutledgeCurzon | page = 175}}</ref> }}


Chryssides goes on to explain the claims specifically:
The Dalai Lama remarked to members of the Cholsum Congress on March 4th, 1996:
{{blockquote|The dispute between Kelsang Gyatso and the Dalai Lama admits of no obvious resolution. The Dalai Lama stands accused of restricting the religious freedom of followers of Tibetan Buddhism, and of causing widespread suffering to Shugden supporters, who are not denied access to their protector deity, but who are the victims of persecution, unable to get jobs that relate to the Tibetan government-in-exile (for example, in schools), and are denied humanitarian assistance.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Chrysiddes|first1=George|title=Exploring New Religions|date=2001|publisher=Bloomsbury Academic|page=241}}</ref> }}
{{quote|It is good that paying attention to my health you have passed a resolution regarding this matter. Danger to health does not exclusively mean an armed attack. This type is extremely rare in Tibetan society. If there is continued indifference to my injunctions, then there would not be any point in my continuing to live silently as a disappointed man.<ref>Letter by the Dalai Lama's Private Office</ref>}}


Ardley explains the political nature of the controversy:
The Dalai Lama also says that Dorje Shugden is a spirit who causes harm to his own life and the cause of a free Tibet.<ref name=autogenerated3>www.dalailama.com</ref> However, Shugden practitioners reply that their worship does not harm the institution of the Dalai Lama or his government, since all Buddhists believe that taking refuge in the ] protects them any spiritual harm. Instead, the Dalai Lama's actions are seen by them as serving only "to produce a powerful emotional response in the intensely nationalistic, devout and loyal exiled Tibetans."<ref>, Wisdom Buddha Dorje Shugden website, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> Moreover, according to ] of the ], there was a time when Shugden was seen to protect Tibet. The Dalai Lama consulted the oracle of Shugden and "this protected Tibet for another year or for so." After that experience, the Dalai Lama made regular prayers to Shugden, until he received signs in a dream that he should stop.<ref> by Lama Zopa Rinpoche, p. 7, retrieved 2008-12-06</ref>
{{blockquote| the Dalai Lama, as a political leader of the Tibetans, was at fault in forbidding his officials from partaking in a particular religious practice, however undesirable. However, given the two concepts (religious and political) remain interwoven in the present Tibetan perception, an issue of religious controversy was seen as threat to political unity. The Dalai Lama used his political authority to deal with what was and should have remained a purely religious issue. A secular Tibetan state would have guarded against this.{{Citation | last =Ardley | first =Jane | year =2002 | title =The Tibetan Independence Movement: Political, Religious and Gandhian Perspectives | place =London | publisher =RoutledgeCurzon | page = 172}} }}


====Rejection of New Kadampa Tradition / Western Shugden Society claims====
The dispute first developed international dimensions in the 1990s, when the Dalai Lama's statements against the practice of Shugden challenged the British-based ] to oppose him. Geshe Kelsang said that Tibetan practitioners of Dorje Shugden asked him to help them. As a result, Kelsang Gyatso sent a public letter<ref name="cesnur.org"/> to the Dalai Lama, to which he did not receive any response, and subsequently created the Shugden Supporter Community (SSC), which organised protests and a huge media campaign during the Dalai Lama's teaching tour of Europe and America, accusing him of ], denying ], and spreading untruths. According to ], representative to the Americas of the Dalai Lama, there was no suppression of Shugden worship. "Officially there has never been any repression or denial of rights to practitioners," said Wangdi. "But after His Holiness’ advice many monastic orders adopted rules and regulations that would not accept practitioners of Shugden worship in their monastic order."<ref>, David Shankbone, '']'', 2007-11-14, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> However, a Swiss TV documentary made at the time of the first abuses of Dorje Shugden practitioners in 1997 paints a different picture. The documentary shows evidence of violence and even death threats towards Dorje Shugden practitioners with 'wanted' posters of Dorje Shugden adherents being posted in Dharamsala, encouraging violence towards practitioners.<ref name="youtube.com">, SF1 - Swiss Public Television, 1998-01-05, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>
Some scholars reject the claims of the New Kadampa Tradition (NKT) and the Western Shugden Society (WSS). Robert Thurman, for example, states, "The cult and agency attack campaign is futile since its main claims are so easy to refute."{{sfn|Thurman|2013a}} Some scholars reject NKT/WSS claims that the 14th Dalai Lama has suppressed religious freedom, indicating that the situation is actually the opposite. Thurman says, "They then went on the attack, claiming they had been 'banned' and ']', etc., when in fact the Dalai Lama was exercising his religious freedom by not accepting students who reject his advice, and actually go so far as to condemn him!"{{sfn|Thurman|2013a}}


Thurman explains:
In India, some protests and opposition were organised by the Dorje Shugden Religious and Charitable Society with the support of the SSC.<ref> by Dorje Shugden Devotees Charitable and Religious Society and Shugden Supporters Community (Delhi), 1996-06-19, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> The SSC tried to obtain a statement from ] that the TGIE (specifically the ]) had violated ]. However, AI replied in an official press release:
{{blockquote|However, the members of the cult are not content with this situation of having to choose between adopting His Holiness the Dalai Lama as their spiritual mentor or ignoring his judgment and persisting in the Gyalpo Shugden worship. They want to force their supposed mentor to adopt their perspective that the demonic spirit is an enlightened being, almost more important than the Buddha himself, and perhaps also rejoin their worship of it, or at least give them all his initiatory teachings in spite of their defiance of his best advice. So, they feel compelled to attack His Holiness, in order to force him to join their fundamentalist version of a Gelukpa outlook.{{sfn|Thurman|2013b}}}}


Regarding NKT/WSS claims that there is prohibition of Shugden, and therefore a repression of religious freedom, Thierry Dodin states, "No, such a prohibition does not exist. Religious freedom is not at issue here. No one, and most definitely not the Dalai Lama, is repressing religious freedom."<ref group=web name="Dodin" />
{{quote|None of the material AI has received contains evidence of abuses which fall within AI's mandate for action – such as grave violations of fundamental human rights including torture, the death penalty, extra-judicial executions, arbitrary detention or imprisonment, or unfair trials.


Nathan W. Hill, Lecturer in Tibetan and Linguistics at ], states that the Dalai Lama does not control the Indian government or any other government:
This neither asserts nor denies the validity of the allegations against the ], nor finds either side culpable. Amnesty International regards "spiritual issues" and state affairs as separate, whilst seeing the command-based nation-state as the fundamental framework for understanding the category of "actionable human rights abuses". Fundamental to this were linked criteria of state accountability and the exercise of state force, neither of which could clearly be identified within the CTA context.<ref>''Human Rights in Global Perspective'', Routelidge, ISBN 0-415-30410-5</ref>}}
{{blockquote|This accusation makes no sense … the Dalai Lama is not head of any state; he has no military or police at his command; he has no political jurisdiction over which he can exercise suppression. Some members of the Gelug sect left the authority of the Dalai Lama in order to follow what they see as a purer form of religion. These people may not be very popular in other parts of the Gelug sect, but their human rights have not been violated nor their freedoms suppressed; even if some people did want to suppress or silence the pro-Shugen side, they simply have no means of doing so."<ref group=web>Distance from Dalai Lama protests among differing opinions, May 8th, 2014, http://theforeigner.no/pages/news/distance-from-dalai-lama-protests-among-differing-opinions/ {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141017185753/http://theforeigner.no/pages/news/distance-from-dalai-lama-protests-among-differing-opinions/ |date=2014-10-17 }}</ref>}}


Similarly, ] scholar Robert Barnett of ] states that "ID cards are not given out by the Tibetan government in exile, but by the Indian authorities".<ref group=web name=Barnett> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140316161140/http://www.tibetanreview.net/news.php?id=632&search_url=%2Fsearch.php%3Fq%3Dshugden%26 |date=2014-03-16 }}, 2008-07-23, retrieved 2009-10-31.</ref>
By 1998, two years after the Dalai Lama described Dorje Shugden as ‘evil’ and instructed monasteries to collect the names of those disobedient Buddhists who continued worshipping him, "an Indian human rights lawyer, PK Dey, had collected 300 statements from Tibetans in exile in India who had been either threatened or attacked for failing to comply with the Dalai Lama’s orders. 'Those worshipping Shugden are experiencing tremendous harassment,' said Dey. 'This is not in any particular part of the country but everywhere there are Tibetans.'"<ref name="spiked-online.com"> by Brendan O’Neill, 2008-05-20, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>


Barnett comments:
Lamas in the West are also being victimized for their continued practice of Dorje Shugden. Gangchen Rinpoche of Italy has been on the Tibetan Government's top ten list of 'state enemies' since the 1990s and received death threats. <blockquote>
{{blockquote|I also made it clear that the Western Shugden group's allegations are problematic: they are akin to attacking the Pope because some lay Catholics somewhere abuse non-believers or heretics. The Western Shugden Group is severely lacking in credibility, since its form of spirit-worship is heterodox, provocative and highly sectarian in Buddhist terms and so more than likely to be banned from mainstream monasteries – while its claimed concerns about cases of discrimination in India should be addressed by working within the Tibetan community instead of opportunistically attacking the Dalai Lama in order to provoke misinformed publicity for their sect.<ref group=web name=Barnett/>}}


Barnett noted that after the Dalai Lama prohibited his followers from engaging in Shugden rituals, Shugden practitioners in the Tibetan exile community faced persecution that the Dalai Lama's administration did not deal with particularly well, and he expressed concern that the controversy could hurt Tibetan causes. But Barnett said that claiming the difficulties faced by the Shugden practitioners are not a major human rights concern: "We see this being done under the name of human rights, which is not really quite what is at issue here."<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pri.org/stories/2014-10-31/breakaway-buddhists-take-aim-dalai-lama |title = Breakaway Buddhists take aim at the Dalai Lama}}</ref>
He is not allowed back to his ladrang in Sera Monastery. The buildings, prayer hall and monk rooms he has built in his Tsangpa khangtsen, Sera Mey, is there but he is not allowed back. Yet the money he donated for building it, was not returned to him at all. The Monastery kept the money, the buildings, the statues, the rooms and all the items inside, but asked Rinpoche not to return to it!!!! Why doesnt the Tibetan Govt ask all the Three Great Gelugpa Monasteries to return all items, monies and donations made by all Dorje Shugden practicing Sangha?? Why throw them out but keep their offerings? Just think, Gangchen Rinpoche is not allowed back to Sera or be involved in any of the Tibetan Religious gatherings in India at all. His crime is that he practices Dorje Shugden. He refuses to give up the commitments he has received from HH kyabje Trijang Dorje Chang which is his root guru. He is open in regards to keeping his commitment to Trijang Rinpoche. Other countries count criminals as ppl who kill, rape, and rob. But in the Tibetan Societies, you are a criminal if you practice Dorje Shugden. How is that possible in the current century? On Tibetan Govt websites they often speak against or write deragatory messages against Rinpoche. Any moves he makes is twisted around. He is accused of being friends with the Chinese govt so he is 'assumed to be on their payroll.' Payroll for what? Tibetan govt accuses him of receiving money from China to incite disharmony within the Tibetan communities. The ridiculous point is that Rinpoche has been practicing Dorje Shugden even before 1959!<ref>Dharmadhatu Independent Buddhist Blog "http://dharmadhatu.web-log.nl/dharmadhatu/lama-gangchen-rinpoche.html"</ref>
</blockquote>


====New Kadampa Tradition demonstrations====
==The current controversy==
In January 2008 the Dalai Lama started a campaign to destroy the practice once and for all.<ref name="spiked-online.com"/> The actions of monasteries in expelling Dorje Shugden monks are in effect a unilateral decision made by the Dalai Lama: "Recently monasteries have fearlessly expelled Shugden monks where needed. I fully support their actions. I praise them. If monasteries find taking action hard, tell them the Dalai Lama is responsible for this."<ref>, Al Jazeera's People & Power, 2008-09-30, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>


Tibetologist Thierry Dodin states that it is the New Kadampa Tradition "that since the 1990s has held spectacular demonstrations whenever the Dalai Lama went to the West."<ref group=web name="Dodin" /> According to Dodin, "The demonstrators are almost exclusively ] monks and nuns, ordained in the New Kadampa Tradition (NKT) according to the group’s own ritual."<ref group=web name="Dodin" /> Dodin also states, "The NKT can be described typologically as a ] on the basis of its organisational form, its excessive group pressure and blind obedience to its founder. The organisation’s extreme fanaticism and aggressive missionary drive are typical cult features too."<ref group=web name="Dodin" />
The opening address of the fifth session of the ] (TPiE), which began on March 4, 2008, was delivered by Karma Chophel. According to the official website of the TGIE, he lauded the bold initiative of Tibetan monastic communities in their resolve to end the Dolgyal (Shugden) worship, following the long life offering to the Dalai Lama held at ] in south India in February. "This session will present motions to strengthen the present resolution adopted by the TPiE against the propitiation of Shugden," he added.


According to ], the ] is a ] of the New Kadampa Tradition.<ref name="huffingtonpost.com">Thurman, Robert. , Nov 3, 2014, retrieved Nov 4, 2014.</ref>
The ban on the practice of Dorje Shugden has caused a large rift in the Tibetan community.<ref>, The Times of India, 2008-04-23, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> Critics of the ban say that this will increase disharmony in the Tibetan diaspora. On April 22, 2008, the newly-founded ] (WSS) began a campaign directed towards the 14th ], claiming he is "banning them from practicing their own lineage of Buddhism". The campaigns accuse him of being "a hypocrite" who is "persecuting his own people".<ref>http://www.newsday.com/news/local/wire/newyork/ny-bc-ny--dalailama-colgate0422apr22,0,1571830.story ''Dalai Lama repeats call for ] autonomy, not independence''], Newsday, (this is a broken link)</ref> The WSS says that the Dalai Lama and the TGIE have not responded to any of their attempts to dialogue on the subject and supporters say that the TGIE have simply discredited the opposition.<ref>, Investigating the campaign against Dorje Shugden blog, 2008-10-04, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>


There is a group of former members who speak out against the New Kadampa Tradition and their demonstrations.<ref name="huffingtonpost.com"/><ref>Dorjee, Tenzin. , Nov 5, 2014, retrieved Nov 7, 2014.</ref>
According to ], ], the WSS and the Dorje Shugden Devotees Charitable Trust in India,<ref>, Dorje Shugden Devotee's Charitable & Religious Society (Delhi), 2008-05-??, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> on the orders of the Dalai Lama the ban was and continues to be enforced by the TGIE and all other Tibetan Exile associations such as the Tibetan Youth Congress and the Tibetan Women’s Association. Specifically, the WSS claims that:<ref>, Western Shugden Society, 2008-05-21, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>


==Chinese government involvement==
*Monks and nuns are forbidden to do the practice and are unconstitutionally expelled from their monasteries and nunneries if they do not comply
A 2015 ] article alleged "that the religious sect behind the protests has the backing of the ]" and that the "group has emerged as an instrument in Beijing’s long campaign to undermine support for the Dalai Lama".<ref group=web>Lague, David. Mooney, Paul. and Lim, Benjamin Kang. (21 December 2015). Reuters. Retrieved 21 December 2015.</ref> The allegations have been challenged as they were not substantiated by concrete evidence.<ref group=web> HuffPost.</ref>{{Better source needed|date=May 2021}}
*Thousands of Shugden practitioners among the Tibetan lay people are being forced to abandon the practice or lose the support of their government and face orchestrated public humiliation and intimidation
*People who refuse to renounce the practice are losing their jobs, their children are being expelled from schools, and their travel papers, which require prior authorization from the TGIE, are not being endorsed
*Statues have been smashed, temples destroyed, books burned, practitioner’s houses attacked, and even death threats issued


According to ], Shugden activities are financed by the ] of the ] (CCP) as part of its strategy against the Dalai Lama,{{sfn|Thurman|2013a}}{{sfn|Thurman|2013b}} but there is "no documentary proof of a direct link between the NKT front groups ISC or WSS and the Communist United Front".<ref name="huffingtonpost.com"/>
Sara Chamberlain reported that the TGIE will not employ those worshipping Dorje Shugden, keeping a ] of those who do.<ref name="newint.org"/> The TGIE is also accused of labeling Shugden supporters as "terrorists," as reported by ]: "Shugden worshippers have been turned away from jobs, shops and schools. Posters with the message 'no Shugden followers allowed' cover hospital and shop fronts."<ref>, Al Jazeera's People & Power, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>


Raimondo Bultrini documents the Chinese government coordination of Shugden activity in the book ''The Dalai Lama and the King Demon''.{{sfn|Bultrini|2013}}{{refn|group=note|name="autogenerated2013"|Raimondo Bultrini: "He wrote back a few days later, attaching some confidential information on Ganchen Tulku and "Nga lama" Kundeling. In March 1998, shortly after we met, these two men were in Kathmandu, Nepal, with other Shugden followers and a member of the Communist Party of the Autonomous Region of Tibet, Gungthang Ngodup, who had come especially from Lhasa. A few days afterwards, wrote Director Ngodup, an adviser from the Chinese embassy in Nepal, one "Mr. Wang", visited Ganchen’s house. As far as he could determine, the discussion revolved around the type of collaboration to be established between the Shugden followers and the Chinese authorities, including possible financial support. In December of the same year, as reported by the Indian Express and the Tribune, the under-secretary of the Chinese embassy in Delhi, Zhao Hongang, went to the Ganden Monastery in India, accompanied by a devotee from Bylakuppe, Thupten Kunsang, and a monk who had arrived from Sera Mey. In July 1999, also in Kathmandu, other meetings were held between pro-Shugden activists and Chinese representatives. This time, "Mr. Wang" met with Chimi Tsering and other directors of the Delhi "Shugden Society", Lobsang Gyaltsen, Konchok Gyaltsen, Gelek Gyatso, and Soepa Tokhmey, the society’s treasurer. After the final meeting, a letter was drafted to be presented to the United Front Department of the Communist Party to ask for help in countering those discriminating against Shugden practitioners in India…. In January 2000, after the meeting in Kathmandu between representatives of the cult and the Chinese emissaries, the Nepal National Dorje Shugden Society was born, with an office and a full-time staff of three, paid—according to the Dharamsala Security Services—with Communist Party funds funneled through the Chinese embassy. Ganchen Tulku was on the Committee of Consultants. ….Despite the formal denials of the cult’s practitioners, the common strategy of the Chinese authorities by now was obvious. In 2001 the Chinese ambassador was guest of honor at "The Millennium Conference on Human Rights" organized by the Shugden Devotees Religious and Charitable Society of Delhi and held March 20–22 at the most prestigious venue in the Indian capital, the India International Centre. If the reports of the pro-Shugden convention financed by the embassy were only "rumor" spread by World Tibetan News, the ambassador’s presence at the Millennium Conference was hard to reconcile with his routine duties as a diplomat."{{sfn|Bultrini|2013}}}}
Because of perceived religious discrimination, the founder of Kundeling Monastery, Lobsang Yeshe, who lives in ], has filed a complaint against the Dalai Lama at the ] on the grounds of ]. The prosecuting lawyer, Shree Sanjay Jain, argues that when the Dalai Lama excommunicates Dorje Shugden worshippers from Buddhist society, "then it is discrimination of the worst kind."<ref>, Al Jazeera's People & Power, 2008-09-30, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> Such discrimination has taken material form in the newly erected nine-foot wall at Ganden monastery, used to divide Shugden practitioners from non-Shugden monks.<ref name=autogenerated13> by the Western Shugden Society</ref>


Warren Smith asserts that within Chinese-controlled territory, the Chinese government demanded that monks worship Shugden, in conjunction with forcing them to denounce the Dalai Lama and fly the ].{{sfn|Smith|2010|p=34}}
The TGIE accuses Lobsang Yeshe of being paid by the Chinese and state that he has visited China at least twice. He however denies working for the Chinese, but does confirm that he has Chinese friends and he praises the Chinese "for what they are doing in Tibet," claiming that if Tibetans who followed Dorje Shugden had to live under the Dalai Lama in Tibet, they "would have possibly been ]".<ref name="france24-080808">
{{cite news
| title = The Dalai Lama's Demons
| publisher = ]
| date = ]
| url = http://www.france24.com/en/20080808-dalai-lama-demons-india-buddhism-dorje-shugden
| accessdate = 2008-09-06}}</ref>


According to Ben Hillman,
==Arguments for and against the practice==
{{blockquote|According to one senior lama from ], the Chinese government naturally allies itself with the Shugden supporters, not just to undermine the Dalai Lama, but because most Shugden worshippers come from Eastern Tibet, from areas that were only ever loosely under Lhasa’s jurisdiction and are today integrated into the Chinese provinces of Sichuan and ]. Monks who had traveled across these areas note that the central government has allocated a disproportionate amount of funds since 1996 to pro-Shugden monasteries to assist them with construction and renovations. Evidence of local government favoritism toward the pro-Shugden faction began to emerge at S Monastery in 2003 when monks applied for permission to undertake studies in India. Despite equal numbers of applications from all khangtsens, of the 12 monks who were issued travel documents, only one was from an anti-Shugden khangtsen. Similarly, in 2004, one of the monastery’s smallest and (previously) poorest khangtsens began to build an elaborate new prayer room and residence for its handful of members. Financial support had been obtained from Beijing through a network of pro-Shugden lamas with access to officials at the highest level.{{sfn|Hillman|2005}}}}
===Views of the 14th Dalai Lama and replies from Shugden practitioners===
The ] is asking people who want to take Tantric initiation from him to let go of the practice of Dorje Shugden,<ref name="SW05">, FPMT official website, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> giving three main reasons:<ref>, HH the Dalai Lama official website, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref><ref>, 2008-05-31, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>


According to the Tibetologist Thierry Dodin, "China had encouraged division among the Tibetans by promoting followers of the Dorje Shugden sect to key positions of authority.<ref group=web name="BBC">, 10 May 2006.</ref>
{{cquote|
#Although he himself engages in protector worship on a daily basis with the deity ], the Dalai-Lama says that such practices degenerate the profound and vast teachings of Buddhism, wherein our ultimate refuge is the Buddha, the Dharma and the Sangha. While the profound teachings of the Buddha are based on the two truths and the ], the appeasing and propitiating of Dholgyal, to the extent it is done by those who do this practice, degenerate the Buddhist practice into a form of spirit worship.
#Although most Gelug Lamas who practice Dorje Shugden are non-sectarian, such as Trijang Rinpoche who was well respected by members of all four Tibetan schools, the Dalai-Lama says that this practice goes against His Holiness' non-sectarian approach especially within the Tibetan Buddhist traditions. His Holiness himself practices teachings from the other traditions such as Nyingma, Sakya and Kagyu simultaneously with the Geluk tradition and encourages others to do the same. However, the practice of Dholgyal is extremely sectarian.
#Although no historic nor scriptural proof has been given to support his claim, the Dalai-Lama says that the Dholgyal spirit has a long history of antagonistic attitude to the Dalai Lamas and the Tibetan Government they head since the time of the ]. Throughout that period, it has also been very controversial in both the Geluk and Sakya traditions. In fact, the Great 5th Dalai Lama and the Great ], as well as many other prominent Tibetan lamas have categorically stated the harmful effects of this practice and have advised against the practice and propitiation of Dholgyal.}}


He also provides a couple of examples of the Chinese government's role in Shugden activity:
Responding to the above three points, the Western Shugden Society replies:<ref>, Wisdom Buddha Dorje Shugden blog, 2008-08-05, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>
{{blockquote|For instance, the construction of Shugden temples and monasteries is being subsidised by the State. We also know that most of the teachers surrounding the young man who in 1995 was designated as the Panchen Lama by the Chinese leadership, against the will of the Dalai Lama, belong to the Shugden group. I think these examples clearly demonstrate the role China is playing in this conflict.<ref group=web name="Dodin" />}}


Also the ] in India has stated that "In order to undermine the peace and harmony within the Tibetan people, China provides political and financial support to Shugden worshippers in Tibet, India and Nepal in particular, and in general, across the globe."<ref group=web>{{cite web |url=http://tibet.net/2007/07/10/statement-by-the-cta-on-shugdendholgyal-followers-from-tibet/ |title=Statement by the CTA on Shugden/Dholgyal followers from Tibet |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date=7 October 2007 |website=Central Tibetan Administration (tibet.net) |publisher=the Central Tibetan Administration |access-date=9 September 2013}}</ref> And, in an on-line article published by the '']'', a source in the Religion and Culture Department of the Tibetan Government in exile is quoted as saying that Dorje Shugden followers "have their people in all Tibetan settlements. We are worried about their sources of funding. It might be China or some other anti-Tibetan elements."<ref group=web>{{cite web |url=http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2013-07-10/india/40491361_1_tibetan-community-central-tibetan-dorje-shugden |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130716053226/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2013-07-10/india/40491361_1_tibetan-community-central-tibetan-dorje-shugden |url-status=dead |archive-date=16 July 2013 |title=Rift among Tibetans riddles security agencies' task |author=Gopal Puri |date=10 July 2013 |work=] |access-date=9 September 2013}}</ref>
{{cquote|
#The practice of Dorje Shugden is not spirit worship because Dorje Shugden is viewed as the embodiment of ], the Buddha of Wisdom and because Dorje Shugden practitioners practice the complete ] of ] ]. Moreover, if the Dalai Lama's reason were true, it would meant that the teachings he is giving himself are non-Buddhist as many of these come from his teachers who were faithful Dorje Shugden practitioners.
#There is no evidence to support the claim that they are promoting sectarianism. All they are requesting is the freedom to practice the tradition without being ostracized. For example, ], ] and even actual spirit worshippers are permitted to attend the "formal religious teachings" of the Dalai Lama, but Buddhist Dorje Shugden practitioners are excluded.
#If another political leader were to say someone's spiritual practice was affecting the government headed by that leader and so should be stopped, this would be considered dictatorial and unacceptable. In the same way, it is not correct to say that those who pray to ] for the protection of their ] realizations in any way is detrimental to the government headed by the Dalai Lama.}}


In December 2012, Lama Jampa Ngodrup, a promoter of the practice of Dorje Shugden, apparently became "the first Tibetan lama to be appointed by the Chinese Government to travel on an official trip abroad to give Dharma teachings."<ref group=web>{{cite web |url=http://www.dorjeshugden.com/all-articles/news/the-first-lama-that-china-sent-abroad/ |title=The First Lama That China Sent Abroad |author=Mar Nee |date= 25 January 2013 |website=Dorje Shugden |access-date=9 September 2013}}</ref>
Pro-Dorje Shugden Lamas have asked the Dalai Lama to present valid reasons supporting his claims and, in the absence of any response, have continued to engage in the practice. They continue to rely on teachers such as Trijang Rinpoche, who taught that Dorje Shugden is a Buddha.<ref> by Trijang Rinpoche, circa 1967, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>


According to ] observers, “the de-facto ban issued by the 14th Dalai Lama has generated considerable social tension and division in the diaspora, as well as in Tibetan society within China, leading the Chinese government to consider the Dorje Shugden controversy an important front for undermining what it says are efforts promoted by the 14th Dalai Lama aimed at destabilizing China. The religious hostility has been fed by considerable propaganda and ] efforts during the last two decades … Significantly sensitive are the methodical efforts of the exiled government and its supporting NGOs to silence opposing voices in the controversy, using systematic defamation and coercive methods, including the use of modern disinformation means like coordinated troll campaigns on social media.”<ref group=web> Modern Diplomacy</ref>
However, the Dalai Lama stated conclusively, "I have explained the reasons why I am against the veneration of Shugden and given my sources in a very detailed manner.<ref name="SW05"/>


==Dissolution of International Shugden Community==
==Views of some Non-Gelug Lamas on the Practice of Shugden==
A number of Lamas outside the Gelug tradition also have views Dorje Shugden practice, some favorable and some unfavorable.


In 2015, ] printed allegations that the anti-Dalai Lama Shugden protest campaigns were funded and manipulated by the Chinese Communist Party in order to discredit the Dalai Lama and the so-called "Dalai clique".<ref>{{cite web|author1=David Lague|author2=Stephanie Nebehay|title=Buddhist group leading global anti-Dalai Lama protests disbands|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-dalai-lama-idUSKCN0WD203|website=Reuters|access-date=12 March 2016|location=Geneva, Switzerland|date=March 11, 2016|quote=The directors of the International Shugden Community (ISC) had decided to "completely stop organizing demonstrations against the Dalai Lama," said the statement on the website of the Buddhist group. From March 10, the ISC and its websites would dissolve, the statement added, without giving any explanation.}}</ref>
===Nyingma===
There have been good relationships between followers of Dorje Shugden and Nyingmapas in Tibet and in the exile community. There have also been until recently Nyingma<ref>Mumford, S. (1989). ''Himalayan dialogue: Tibetan lamas and Gurung shamans in Nepal''. New directions in anthropological writing. Madison, Wis: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 126.</ref> practitioners of Dorje Shugden. Mumford writes based on his anthropoligical studies in Nepal in the late 1970s: <blockquote>
"In Gyasumdo the lamas are Nyingmapa, yet most of them honor Shugs-ldan as a lineage guardian picked up in Tibet in the past by their patriline."<ref>Mumford, Stan. ''Himalayan dialogue: Tibetan lamas and Gurung shamans in Nepal'', p. 135. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989.</ref>
</blockquote>


On March 10, 2016, the ] suddenly suspended all operations. Its website was closed down leaving only the following message: "A Special Announcement: The Directors of the International Shugden Community previously announced that from 1 Dec 2015 they had decided to completely stop organising demonstrations against the Dalai Lama. Now, from the 10th March 2016 the International Shugden Community itself will dissolve, including its websites. May everybody be happy. Len Foley, Representative of the International Shugden Community." They added, "We are campaigning for an end to the discrimination against the people of our faith that the Dalai Lama has created"<ref>{{cite web|title=A Special Announcement|url=http://internationalshugdencommunity.com/|website=International Shugden Community|access-date=12 March 2016}}</ref>
Chogyal Namkhai Norbu considers that Shugden can cause devotees to become "nervous, confused and upset."<ref>Namkhai Norbu Rinpoche, Provocations of the Gyalpo, Dzogchen Community Italy: 2005</ref> Minling Trichen Rinpoche, late head of the Nyingma tradition,<ref> at Rigpa Wiki, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> said that, from his personal understanding, "Shugden is a ghost. We Nyingma practitioner do not follow him. We propagate only those protectors that were bound by ]. Shugden came after Padmasambhava."<ref> by the ]. 2000-12-06, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>


==Tsem Tulku Rinpoche on ending the ban==
Some Shugden practitioners reply that Norbu is biased against the practice. For example, he advises his students to to wear special protection cords when in the presence of a Shugden practitioner and make mudras (hand gestures) to ward off evil spirits, behaviour they consider to be superstitious and shamanistic.
] (1965–2019), ordained at 22 by the 14th Dalai Lama, stood against the position of the Central Tibetan Administration in the Dorje Shugden controversy,<ref>, Huffington Post</ref> and built the world's largest Dorje Shugden statue.<ref>, Tsem Rinpoche Official Website</ref>


In February 2018, Tsem Rinpoche wrote:<ref>{{cite web |title=The Dalai Lama Speaks Clearly About the Dorje Shugden Ban |url=https://www.tsemrinpoche.com/tsem-tulku-rinpoche/dorje-shugden/the-dalai-lama-speaks-clearly-about-the-dorje-shugden-ban.html |website=Tsem Rinpoche dot com |access-date=19 June 2020}}</ref>
===Kaygu===
{{blockquote| ban was formalised and made official with the passing of three resolutions in the Tibetan Parliament which stated clearly the Tibetan leadership’s reasons for discouraging and banning the practice...Dorje Shugden practitioners continue to be abused, belittled, ostracised and violently discriminated against. They are denied the treatment at clinics and hospitals in the Tibetan settlements, barred from shops and restaurants, and forbidden from holding any position in the Tibetan civil service. Their children are blacklisted and bullied at school. Shugden practitioners are shunned by their family and relatives; in the community, they are treated as pariahs.}}
Tai Situpa Rinpoche, one of the highest Lamas in the Kagyu tradition, has said that the practice of Shugden "causes fear." He adds the practice is considered to create obstacles to spiritual practice.<ref> by the ]. 2000-12-06, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> Proponents of the practice reply by saying that, from their own experience, the opposite is the case. Knowing they have the protection of Dorje Shugden reduces their fear and he removes obstacles from their spiritual practice. Given that Tai Situpa does not practice Dorje Shugden, his comments should be taken to be from the viewpoint of his own school.


In April 2019, he penned an article titled ''Dalai Lama Says We Can Practise Dorje Shugden Finally!''<ref name="TsemPracticeFinally">{{cite web |last1=Thubten |first1=Tsem |title=Dalai Lama Says We Can Practise Dorje Shugden Finally! |url=https://www.tsemrinpoche.com/tsem-tulku-rinpoche/current-affairs/dalai-lama-says-we-can-practise-dorje-shugden-finally.html |website=Tsem Rinpoche dot com |access-date=20 June 2020}}</ref> In it, he writes, "His Holiness the Dalai Lama has compassionately shown a change in approach to the Dorje Shugden situation, and we are grateful for this...The gravity and levity of His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s announcements is very, very deep and also transcends everything." Rinpoche points to a 2016 video showing comments made by the Dalai Lama, as well as an article in ] from the same year,<ref name="PhayulDharpo">{{cite web |last1=Dharpo |first1=Tenzin |title=Dalai Lama wraps up teachings in France |url=http://www.phayul.com/news/article.aspx?id=38055&article=Dalai+Lama+wraps+up+teachings+in+France |website=Phayul.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160920191041/http://www.phayul.com/news/article.aspx?id=38055&article=Dalai+Lama+wraps+up+teachings+in+France |access-date=19 June 2020|archive-date=2016-09-20 }}</ref> and an article on the Dalai Lama's website,<ref name="DLnoBan">{{cite web |title=Avalokiteshvara Empowerment and Public Talk |url=https://www.dalailama.com/news/2016/avalokiteshvara-empowerment-and-public-talk |website=Dalai Lama dot com |access-date=19 June 2020}}</ref> all of which he summarized thusly:
===Sakya===
{{blockquote|These are the things His Holiness the Dalai Lama has said recently:
Sakya Trizin, head of the Sakya lineage of Tibetan Buddhism, notes that at one time followers of his school did make offerings to Shugden but that, in this context, Shugden was regarded as a worldly deity. He also mentions two Lamas of pre-occupation Tibet, Dorjechang Chokyi Lodro and Ngor Kangchen Dorjechang, who limited the practice in their monasteries.<ref> by the ]. 2000-12-06, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>
:*His Holiness has said that Dorje Shugden does not harm him
:*Since it does not harm him, it does not harm the Tibetan cause because the Dalai Lama is the upholder of the Tibetan cause
:*His Holiness the Dalai Lama said we can practise Dorje Shugden
:*His Holiness the Dalai Lama even said where we can go if we want to rely on Dorje Shugden, when he tells the audience that there are monasteries adjacent to Gaden and Sera that practise Dorje Shugden (Shar Gaden Monastery and Serpom Monastery)<ref name="TsemPracticeFinally" />}}


==See also==
Some Shugden practitioners reply that different Lamas have different views concerning Dorje Shugden but this is true with respect to any Deity and any religion. The principles of religious freedom and non-sectarianism dictate that each school and Lama respect the views of the other.
*]
*]
*]


==Notes==
==Claims of violence==
{{Reflist|group=note|2}}
===According to the Tibetan Government in Exile===
{{POV-check-section|date=November 2008}}


==References==
In February 1997, three Tibetan Buddhist monks, including the Dalai Lama's close friend and confidant, seventy-year-old ] (the principal of the Institute of Buddhist Dialectics), were brutally murdered in ], India. According to a disciple of Geshe Lobsang Gyatso, before he was killed, Lobsang Gyatso had to face many death threats, but refused any personal security.<ref>Austria Buddhist magazine "Ursache und Wirkung", 2006-07-??, p. 73</ref>
{{reflist|20em}}


==Sources==
At the site of the murder, Lobsang Gyatso had grabbed from his assailants a bag containing a document issued by the Dorje Shugden Society, indicating their possible involvement in the murders.<ref>, ], 1997-04-28, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> The six suspects are believed to have crossed over into Tibet, escorted to their villages of origin by the Chinese Army.<ref>, ], 1997-11-29, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> As recently as June 2007, Interpol issued a ] to China for extraditing two of the accused killers.<ref> by Jane Macartney, ], 2007-06-22, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>


===Printed sources===
Helmut Gassner, an Austrian Buddhist monk who was a translator for the Dalai Lama, reviewed the letter found in the bag of one of the assailants but conluded it contained no death threats, as claimed on television by Tashi Wangdi, the Tibetan Prime Minister at the time. Gassner publically accused the TGIE of feeding the media with an "intentionally distorted translation" that was intended to frame Dorje Shugden practitioners.<ref> by Helmut Gassner</ref> He also commented that many people had been the subjects of Lobsang Gyatso's "slanderous writings," suggesting that there are any number of other potential suspects to his murder.<ref> by Helmut Gassner, 1999-03-26, retrieved 2008-12-06</ref> Referring to accusations made against the Dalai Lama in the ''Mongoose-Canine Letter'',<ref>. Dorje Shugden Truth blog. 2008-10-16. retrieved 2008-12-08.</ref> Geshe ] asked: "... HH the Dalai Lama has many enemies, so why are only Shugden supporters suspected?"<ref> by Geshe Kelsang Gyatso</ref> Tony Clifton concluded that "the Shugdens are suspect because no alternative theory has emerged to explain this unholy crime. But the mystery of the Dharmsala murders is far from solved."<ref> by Tony Clifton, ], 1997-04-28, retrieved 2008-12-04.</ref>
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{{refend}}


===Web sources===
===According to Shugden practitioners===
{{reflist|group=web}}
Many Dorje Shugden practitioners have appeared in ] in both India and elsewhere since the 1990s for no other reason than their adherence to this religious practice. One example is Jamphel Yeshe, the President of the Dorje Shugden Society, who talks of the wanted posters and death threats in his 1997 biography. He quotes one of the wanted posters: "This is my wife's name. The names of all my children are listed..."<ref>, Wisdom Buddha Dorje Shugden website, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>

Wanted posters described people believed to be Shugden leaders as the "top ten enemies of the state". The posters were put up in monasteries, settlements and in ] by the TGIE. In Clementown, India, "the house of a family of Shugden worshippers was stoned and then firebombed."<ref name="newint.org"/>

In July 2008, wanted posters of several monks involved in the WSS protests appeared in Queens, New York.<ref>, Wisdom Buddha Dorje Shugden blog, 2008-08-06, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> ] reported about the wanted posters saying, "No Shugden worshipper has ever been charged or investigated for terrorism and yet the monks that continue to worship Shugden remain victims of name and shame."<ref>, Al Jazeera's People & Power, 2008-09-30, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> Dorje Shugden practitioners have also received other warning and death threats since the 1990s.<ref name="youtube.com"/>

Shugden practitioners have been subjected to violence while protesting the ban, both in the 1990s and in the present-day.<ref name="WSS-news-reponsetoletter">
{{cite news
| title = Response to letter from the Australian Sangha Association
| publisher = ]
| date = ]
| url = http://www.westernshugdensociety.org/en/news/response-to-letter-from-the-australian-sangha-association
| accessdate = 2008-09-17}}</ref> In 1996, outside a monastery in southern India, a group of pro Dalai Lama supporters (including monks) surrounded hundreds of monks who had gathered to demonstrate against the Dalai Lama's ban on Dorje Shugden and threw stones and bricks. Sixty of the Dorje Shugden monks were hospitalized with serious injuries.<ref>, 2008-08-05, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> On July 17 2008, a mob of Dalai Lama supporters surrounded Shugden protestors after the Dalai Lama's teachings at Radio City in New York, spitting, screaming, and throwing bottles and coins.<ref>, Rediff India Abroad, 2008-07-18, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref><ref>, 2008-07-31, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref> The New York riot police led the protestors away to safety.<ref> by Pilar Conci and Jamie Schram, New York Post, 2008-07-18, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref><ref>, Western Shugden Society press release, 2008-07-18, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>

In July 2008, the group Save Tibet announced: "We appeal you to cut any ties of buying and selling foods in restaurants and shops with whoever has connection to this Dholgyal organization that choose enemy and forsake friend."<ref>, Western Shugden Society, 2008-07-07, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>

In October 2008, ] reported that the residence of a Dorje Shugden practitioner had been firebombed by Tibetan monks "loyal to the Dalai Lama."<ref> by Lobsang Choephel, Radio Free Asia, 2008-10-02, retrieved 2008-12-04</ref>

==See also==
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==References==
{{reflist|2}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{Prone to spam|date=March 2014}}
===Supporters of Dorje Shugden===
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* - includes ] documentary "An Unholy Row" and Second Shugden Documentary filmed by Swiss TV in 1998
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* by the ]
'''Academic'''
*
*
* by Tenzin Peljor
* {{Cite journal | first =Paul | last =Williams | year =1996 | title =A quick note on Dorje Shugden (rDo rje shugs ldan) | journal =The Middle Way |volume=71 |issue=2 | url =http://info-buddhism.com/dorje_shugden_note_Paul_Williams.html | access-date = 2013-12-20}}
'''History'''
* {{Cite web | last = Dodin | first = Thierry | title = The Dorje Shugden Conflict | publisher=Michael Jaeckel | date = 8 May 2014 | url = http://info-buddhism.com/Dorje_Shugden_Conflict_Dalai_Lama_protests_Thierry_Dodin.html |access-date=12 May 2014}}
*{{cite web | last1 =Gardner | first1 =Alexander | date =4 June 2013 | title =Treasury of Lives: Dorje Shugden | publisher =The Tricycle Foundation | url =http://www.tricycle.com/blog/treasury-lives-dorje-shugden | access-date=27 April 2014}}
* {{cite web |url=http://www.dalailama.com/messages/dolgyal-shugden/ganden-tripa/the-shugden-affair-i |title=''The Shugden affair: Origins of a Controversy (Part I)'' |author=Georges Dreyfus |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131103131534/http://dalailama.com/messages/dolgyal-shugden/ganden-tripa/the-shugden-affair-i |archive-date=2013-11-03 |url-status=dead|author-link=Georges Dreyfus }}
* {{cite web |url=http://www.dalailama.com/messages/dolgyal-shugden/ganden-tripa/the-shugden-affair-ii |title=''The Shugden affair: Origins of a Controversy (Part II)'' |author=Georges Dreyfus |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161211114100/http://dalailama.com/messages/dolgyal-shugden/ganden-tripa/the-shugden-affair-ii |archive-date=2016-12-11 |url-status=dead|author-link=Georges Dreyfus }}
'''Protests'''
* {{Cite web | last = Barnett | first = Robert | title = Protests against the Dalai Lama over Dorje Shugden | publisher=Michael Jaeckel | date = 12 December 2014 | url = http://info-buddhism.com/Dalai_Lama_protests_Shugden_Robbie_Barnett.html |access-date=12 December 2014}}
'''Pro Dalai Lama'''
* – includes ] documentary "An Unholy Row" and Second Shugden Documentary filmed by Swiss TV in 1998
* by the ]
*
*
;Pro-Shugden
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150315213037/http://kadampa.org/en/ |date=2015-03-15 }}
*


{{DEFAULTSORT:Dorje Shugden Controversy}}
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Latest revision as of 03:03, 13 November 2024

Controversy surrounding protector spirit of Gelug Buddhism
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History and overview

The Dorje Shugden controversy is a controversy over Dorje Shugden, also known as Dolgyal, whom some consider to be one of several protectors of the Gelug school, the school of Tibetan Buddhism to which the Dalai Lamas belong. Dorje Shugden has become the symbolic focal point of a conflict over the "purity" of the Gelug school and the inclusion of non-Gelug teachings, especially Nyingma ones.

In the 1930s, Pabongkhapa Déchen Nyingpo, who favoured an "exclusive" stance, started to promote Shugden as a major protector of the Gelug school, who harms any Gelug practitioner who blends his practice with non-Gelug practices. The conflict resurfaced with the publication of The Yellow Book in 1976, containing stories about Shugden's wrathful acts against Gelugpas who also practiced Nyingma teachings. In response, the 14th Dalai Lama, a Gelugpa himself and advocate of an "inclusive" approach (Rimé) to Tibetan Buddhism, began speaking out against the practice of Dorje Shugden in 1978.

The controversy attracted attention in the West following demonstrations by Dorje Shugden practitioners, especially Kelsang Gyatso's Britain-based New Kadampa Tradition, which broke away from the Gelug school in 1991. Other factions supporting Dorje Shugden are Serpom Monastic University and Shar Ganden Monastery, both of which separated from mainstream Gelug in 2008.

In April 2019, Tsem Tulku Rinpoche published an article summarizing statements made in 2016 by the Dalai Lama, which Rinpoche said equate to overt permission to practice Dorje Shugden, representing a complete reversal of the Dalai Lama's former position.

History

Pre-1930s

Dorje Shugden, also known as Dolgyal, originated as a gyalpo "angry and vengeful spirit" of South Tibet. Originally from the Sakya school as a minor protector that was part of the Three Gyalpo Kings (Shugden, Setrap, and Tsiu Marpo), Shugden was subsequently adopted as a "minor protector" of the Gelug, the newest of the schools of Tibetan Buddhism, headed by the Dalai Lamas (although nominally the Ganden Tripas).

1930s-1940s Pabongkha

Promotion of Dorje Shugden

In the 1930s, Pabongkhapa Déchen Nyingpo started to promote Dorje Shugden. According to Kay, Pabongka fashioned Shugden as a violent protector of the Gelug school, who is employed against other traditions, transforming Dorje Shugden's "marginal practice into a central element of the Ge-luk tradition", thus "replacing the traditional supra-mundane protectors of the Ge-luk tradition", namely Mahākāla, Kalarupa, Vaiśravaṇa, Palden Lhamo, Pehar and Nechung who were appointed by Je Tsongkhapa.

According to Georges Dreyfus, "Shuk-den was nothing but a minor Ge-luk protector before the 1930s when Pa-bong-ka started to promote him aggressively as the main Ge-luk protector." Dreyfus also notes,

he propitiation of Shukden as a Geluk protector is not an ancestral tradition, but a relatively recent invention of tradition associated with the revival movement within the Geluk spearheaded by Pabongkha.

This change is reflected in artwork, since there is "lack of Dorje Shugden art in the Gelug school prior to the end of the 19th century."

Persecution of the Rimé movement

Dorje Shugden was a key tool in Pabongkhapa's persecution of the flourishing Rimé movement, an ecumenical movement which fused the teachings of the Sakya, Kagyu and Nyingma, in response to the dominance of the Gelug school. Non-Gelug, especially Nyingma, monasteries were forced to convert to the Gelug position.

As the Gelug agent of the Tibetan government in Kham (Khams) (Eastern Tibet), and in response to the Rimed movement that had originated and was flowering in that region, Phabongkha Rinpoche and his disciples employed repressive measures against non-Gelug sects. Religious artefacts associated with Padmasambhava – who is revered as a "second Buddha" by Nyingma practitioners – were destroyed, and non-Gelug, and particularly Nyingma, monasteries were forcibly converted to the Gelug position. A key element of Phabongkha Rinpoche’s outlook was the cult of the protective deity Dorje Shugden, which he married to the idea of Gelug exclusivism and employed against other traditions as well as against those within the Gelug who had eclectic tendencies.

Pabongkhapa feared a decline of Gelug monasteries, and induced a revival movement, which promoted the Gelug as the only pure tradition. He regarded the practice of non-Gelug teachings by Gelug monks as a threat to the Gelug tradition, and opposed the influence of the other schools, especially the Nyingma. He coupled Dorje Shugden to Gelug exclusivism, using it against other traditions, and against Gelugpa's with eclectic tendencies. The main function of the deity was presented as "the protection of the Ge-luk tradition through violent means, even including the killing of its enemies."

Response by the 13th Dalai Lama

The abbot of Drepung Monastery and the 13th Dalai Lama were opposed to Pabongkapa's propitiation of Shugden. Restrictions on the practice of Shugden were implemented by the 13th Dalai Lama. Pabongkhapa apologized and promised not to engage in Shugden practices any more.

1970s

Publication of The Yellow Book

In 1975, The Yellow Book, also known as The Oral Transmission of the Intelligent Father, was published. It enumerates a series of stories that Zimey Rinpoche had heard informally from Trijang Rinpoche about ‘the many Ge-luk lamas whose lives are supposed to have been shortened by Shuk-den’s displeasure at their practicing Nying-ma teachings’. The text asserts the pre-eminence of the Gelug school which is symbolised and safeguarded by Dorje Shugden, and presents a stern warning to those within the Gelug whose eclectic tendencies would compromise the school's purity. The book provoked angry reactions from non-Gelug traditions, triggering a bitter literary exchange that drew on ‘all aspects of sectarian rivalry’.

Response by the 14th Dalai Lama

1998 Berlin New Kadampa Tradition demonstration protest against the 14th Dalai Lama. Some German slogans translated are "You know that Dorje Shugden harms no being, please Dalai Lama stop spreading lies!" and "Dorje Shugden loves all Buddhist traditions, please don't lie!"

The 14th Dalai Lama publicly rejected The Yellow Book, claiming that it could only damage the common cause of the Tibetan people because of its sectarian divisiveness. In a series of talks, he sought to undermine the status elevation of Dorje Shugden by reaffirming the centrality of traditional supramundane protectors of the Gelug tradition. He also vehemently rejected Dorje Shugden's associated sectarianism, emphasising that all the Tibetan traditions are ‘equally profound dharmas’ and defending the ‘unbiased and eclectic’ approach to Buddhist practice as exemplified by the Second, Third and Fifth Dalai Lamas.

Scholar Donald S. Lopez Jr. explains, "The Dalai Lama’s renunciation of Shugden in 1976 caused great discord within the Geluk community, where devotion to the deity remained strong among the Geluk hierarchy and among large factions of the refugee lay community; spirited defenses of his worship were written and published. Some went so far as to claim that the Dalai Lama was not the true Dalai Lama, that the search party had selected the wrong child forty years before."

According to Georges Dreyfus, the sectarian elements of The Yellow Book were not unusual and do not "justify or explain the Dalai Lama's strong reaction." Instead, he traces back the conflict more on the exclusive/inclusive approach and maintain that to understand the Dalai Lama's point of view one has to consider the complex ritual basis for the institution of the Dalai Lamas, which was developed by the Great Fifth and rests upon "an eclectic religious basis in which elements associated with the Nyingma tradition combine with an overall Gelug orientation." This involves the promotion and practices of the Nyingma school. Kay reminds us, "hen traditions come into conflict, religious and philosophical differences are often markers of disputes that are primarily economic, material and political in nature."

1980s

Bluck notes the activity regarding Dorje Shugden practice in the 80s: "In the early 1980s the Dalai Lama restricted reliance on Dorje Shugden to private rather than public practice. The tension this caused within the Gelug and wider Tibetan community may reflect some opposition to his ecumenical approach."

1990s

Initiations by the 14th Dalai Lama

With the urging of the other schools who have long been opposed to Shugden, and his senior Gelug tutor who always doubted the practice, the 14th Dalai Lama asked the increasing number of western Shugden practitioners who were newly being proselytized primarily in Britain to refrain from attending his teachings. George Chryssides, quoting Stephen Batchelor, states:

Affairs came to a head in March 1996, when the Dalai Lama formally pronounced his opposition to Dorje Shugden, saying "It has become fairly clear that Dolgyal (i.e. Shugden) is a spirit of the dark forces." (Batchelor, 1998, p. 64) The Tibetan government in exile is said to have conducted house searches, demanding that people sign a declaration stating that they have abandoned Dorje Shugden practice (Batchelor, 1998, p. 64).

New Kadampa Tradition

The New Kadampa Tradition, founded by Kelsang Gyatso in 1991, has continued the worship of Dorje Shugden. Kelsang Gyatso regards his school to be the true continuation of the "pure" teachings of Je Tsongkhapa, rejecting the "inclusivism" of the Dalai Lama. Thurman notes that members of the New Kadampa Tradition, responded by trying

...to force their supposed mentor to adopt their perspective that the demonic spirit is an enlightened being, almost more important than the Buddha himself, and perhaps also rejoin their worship of it, or at least give them all his initiatory teachings in spite of their defiance of his best advice.

Martin Mills states that:

recent dispute within the Gelukpa Order over the status of the Dharma Protector Dorje Shugden have focused on claims by a breakaway order of the Gelukpa, the British-based New Kadampa Tradition, that Shugden is of Buddha status (most Gelukpa commentators place him as a worldly deity)

DSRCS and SSC/WSS

In India, some protests and opposition were organised by the Dorje Shugden Religious and Charitable Society (DSRCS) with the support of the Shugden Supporters Community (SSC), now called Western Shugden Society.

In, 1996 the SSC attempted to obtain a statement from Amnesty International (AI) that the TGIE (specifically the 14th Dalai Lama) had violated human rights. However, the AI replied that the SSC's allegations were as yet unsubstantiated. Two years later, the AI stated in an official press release that complaints by Shugden practitioners fell outside its purview of "grave violations of fundamental human rights" (such as torture, the death penalty, extrajudicial executions, arbitrary detention or imprisonment, or unfair trials), adding that "while recognizing that a spiritual debate can be contentious, cannot become involved in debate on spiritual issues." In itself, the nuanced statement neither asserted nor denied the validity of the claims made against the TGIE, just that they were not actionable according to AI's mandate.

The DSRCS and Kundeling Lama filed a petition against the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) and the Dalai Lama, accusing them of harassment and maltreatment. On 5 April 2010, Justice S. Muralidhar dismissed the petition, stating that allegations of violence and harassment were "vague averments" and that there as an "absence of any specific instances of any such attacks."

Murder of Lobsang Gyatso and two students

On February 4, 1997, the principal of the Buddhist School of Dialectics, Lobsang Gyatso, was murdered along with two of his students in Dharmasala . Kay notes "The subsequent investigation by the Indian police linked the murders to the Dorje Shugden faction of the exiled Tibetan community."

In a small 1978 pamphlet, Lobsang Gyatso alluded to a "knotless heretic teacher", which some people took as referring to Trijang Lobsang Yeshe Tenzin Gyatso and his advocacy of Shugden. According to Lobsang Gyatso's biographer, Gareth Sparham, many geshes and lamas were outraged over his criticism:

How could a nobody like Lobsang Gyatso, who was neither from an aristocratic family nor the head of a Tibetan region, indeed not even a full graduate of a religious university, dare to criticize in print an important establishment figure? Georges Dreyfus at the time remarked that in pre-1959 Gen-la would have been killed outright for his temerity. Many in the Tibetan community ostracized Gen-la, even though the Dalai Lama had already by that time begun speaking publicly against the Shugden cult. Even the Dalai Lama appeared to distance himself from Gen-la. "He is headstrong and his lack of sensitivity is making trouble", seemed to be his attitude towards Gen-la at the time.

Georges Dreyfus added, "Despite being hurt by the polemical attack, Tri-jang Rin-po-che made it clear that violence was out of the question. Gradually, tempers cooled down and the incident was forgotten—or so it seemed."

In June 2007, the Times stated that Interpol had issued a Red notice to China for extraditing two of the alleged killers, Lobsang Chodak and Tenzin Chozin. Robert Thurman adds that the alleged killers had their origin within China as well. The Seattle Times reported, "The two men suspected of stabbing their victims are believed to have fled India. Five others, all linked to the Dorje Shugden Society in New Delhi, were questioned for months about a possible conspiracy. No one has been charged."

Kelsang Gyatso denied the involvement of any of his followers in the murder, and condemned the killings. Matthews notes that "In spite of speculation, no connection has been found between New Kadampa Tradition and the murders in Dharamsala"

2000s-present

Attempted murder

Trijang Chocktrul Rinpoche revealed an attempt to frame the Central Tibetan Administration with murder:

In my own labrang, I have recently witnessed a kind of factionalism, and I have discovered that one person in particular was planning an evil conspiracy. This plan was to murder my assistant, Tharchin, and to implicate His Holiness’s government-in-exile with this odious crime If he had succeeded in his plan, it would have been a cause of great trouble for the labrang, as well as a cause of disgrace to the Tibetan government and His Holiness the Dalai Lama.

Trijang Chocktrul Rinpoche's declaration disturbed the image of a peaceful community, and the polemics against the Dalai Lama diminished for a long while.

Schism within the Gelug school

The Gelugpa school has three great monasteries, namely Sera, Ganden, and Drepung. In 2008, the Dorje Shugden controversy led to formal schism within the Gelug school. Pomra Khangtsen, one of the sixteen sections of Sera monastery, legally separated itself in India from the rest of Sera, continuing as "Serpom Monastic University" at Bylakuppe. Also in 2008, a section of Ganden Shartse at Mundgod similarly separated itself from Ganden and is now known as "Shar Ganden Monastery". In these institutions, the monks continue to worship Dorje Shugden as well as follow traditional curricula and other religious practices of their parent institutions. A few smaller Gelug monasteries have affiliated themselves with these two monasteries rather than with mainstream Gelug.

The present abbot of Serpom is Kyabje Yongyal and its acting abbot is Jampa Khetsun. The present abbot of Shar Ganden is Lobsang Jinpa.

Protests

Hundreds of western Shugden practitioners have staged numerous demonstrations against the Dalai Lama, most recently in 2015 when he opened the Aldershot Buddhist Centre and in Cambridge, and 2014 in San Francisco, Berkeley, Washington, D.C., Oslo, Rotterdam, and Frankfurt.

In response, the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) published different statements and corrections to the protesters' claims. They also posted two lists of Tibetan participants of the protests and a declaration by former NKT members and ex-practitioners of Dorje Shugden. International Campaign for Tibet also condemned the protests, stating in February 2015, "The way group has been denigrating the Dalai Lama is an affront to the Tibetan people and is causing great damage to the broader Tibetan issue."

Views

Views of opponents of Dorje Shugden practice

Ling Rinpoche

Ling Rinpoche, who was the Ganden Tripa and senior Gelug tutor to the 14th Dalai Lama, was opposed to Shugden as he hailed from Drepung Monastery.

Views of the 14th Dalai Lama

The 14th Dalai Lama himself said in 2008, that he never used the word "ban", but "he strongly discourages Tibetan Buddhists" in practicing Shugden and "restricting a form of practice that restricts others’ religious freedom is actually a protection of religious freedom. So in other words, negation of a negation is an affirmation". The advice of the 14th Dalai Lama was approved by the Central Tibetan Administration and the Parliament in exile in 1996. It was then gradually implemented into a ban starting from 1997 by the Tibetan Youth Congress including enforcement measures like imposing all spiritual masters to stop worshipping Shugden "in the interest of the Dalai Lama and Tibetan Independence" or urging all other Tibetan organizations and communities to expel anyone who venerates Shugden.

Several reasons for the 14th Dalai Lama's stance have been given. According to John Makransky,

The current Dalai Lama, seeking to combat the ancient, virulent sectarianisms operative in such quarters, has strongly discouraged the worship of the "protector" deity known as Dorje Shugden, because one of its functions has been to force conformity to the dGe-lugs-pa sect (with which the Dalai Lama himself is most closely associated) and to assert power over competing sects.

According to Kapstein, the 14th Dalai Lama is "focused upon the role of Shugden as a militantly sectarian protector of the Gelukpa order, and the harm that has been done to Tibetan sectarian relations by the cult's more vociferous proponents."

According to Dreyfus, the 14th Dalai Lama stance stems from his favoring the traditional Gelug traditions and protectors rather than Shugden:

n this dispute the Dalai Lama’s position does not stem from his Buddhist modernism and from a desire to develop a modern nationalism, but from his commitment to another protector, Nechung, who is said to resent Shukden his opposition to Shukden is motivated by his return to a more traditional stance in which this deity is seen as incompatible with the vision of the tradition (the "clan") represented by the Fifth Dalai Lama.

Views of Shugden practitioners

Kelsang Gyatso

In an interview with scholar Donald Lopez on the controversy, Kelsang Gyatso explains:

We believe that Dorje Shugden is a buddha who is also a dharmapala. Problems have arisen because of someone’s view. So although we say the "Dorje Shugden problem" in reality this is a human problem, not a Dorje Shugden problem. This is not a fault of Buddha-dharma, not a fault of Tibetan Buddhism, or even a fault of Tibetan people in general. This is a particular person’s wrong view. He can keep this view, of course, but forcing other people to follow this is not right. For this reason, nowadays we are showing many problems to the world. We are ashamed and sorry that this causes the reputation of Buddhists in general to be damaged. It is not a general Buddhist problem, but a specific problem within Tibetan Buddhism.

In the interview, Kelsang Gyatso states:

Of course we believe that every Nyingmapa and Kagyupa have their complete path. Not only Gelugpa. I believe that Nyingmapas have a complete path. Of course, Kagyupas are very special. We very much appreciate the example of Marpa and Milarepa . Milarepa showed the best example of guru devotion. Of course the Kagyupas as well as the Nyingmapas and the Sakyapas, have a complete path to enlightenment.

According to Kelsang Gyatso,

Dorje Shugden always helps, guides, and protects pure and faithful practitioners by granting blessings, increasing their wisdom, fulfilling their wishes, and bestowing success on all their virtuous activities. Dorje Shugden does not help only Gelugpas; because he is a Buddha he helps all living beings, including non-Buddhists.

According to David Kay, Kelsang Gyatso departs from Pabongkhapa and Trijang Rinpoche by stating that Dorje Shugden's appearance is enlightened, rather than worldly. According to Kay, "Geshe Kelsang takes the elevation of Dorje Shugden’s ontological status another step further, emphasising that the deity is enlightened in both essence and appearance." He quotes Kelsang Gyatso on Dorje Shugden's appearance: "Some people believe that Dorje Shugdan is an emanation of Manjushri who shows the aspect of a worldly being, but this is incorrect. Even Dorje Shugdan’s form reveals the complete stages of the path of Sutra and Tantra, and such qualities are not possessed by the forms of worldly beings." According to Kay, Kelsang Gyatso downplays the oracle of Shugden, since it conflicts with his notion of Shugden being a Buddha:

he oracle may have been marginalised by Geshe Kelsang because his presence raised a doctrinal ambiguity for the NKT. According to traditional Tibetan teachings, none of the high-ranking supramundane protective deities ‘would condescend to interfere with more or less mundane affairs by speaking through the mouth of a medium’. The notion of oracular divination may thus have been problematised for Geshe Kelsang in light of his portrayal of Dorje Shugden as a fully enlightened being.

Third-party views

Dorje Shugden Practitioners

According to Dreyfus, "The irony is that Shuk-den is presented by his followers as the protector of the Ge-luk (dge lugs) school, of which the Dalai Lama is the (de facto) leader."

According to Buddhist professor and Nyingma teacher John Markansky:

ome Tibetan monks who now introduce Westerners to practices centred on a native Tibetan deity, without informing them that one of its primary functions has been to assert hegemony over rival sects! Western followers of a few dGe lugs pa monks who worship that deity, lacking any critical awareness of its sectarian functions in Tibet, have recently followed the Dalai Lama to his speaking engagements to protest his strong stance (for non-sectarianism) in the name of their "religious freedom" to promulgate, now in the West, an embodiment of Tibetan sectarianism. If it were not so harmful to persons and traditions, this would surely be one of the funniest examples of the cross-cultural confusion that lack of critical reflection continues to create.

New Kadampa Tradition / Western Shugden Society claims

Scholar Jane Ardley explains the development of the claims of the WSS:

Worship of this figure is especially popular in eastern Tibet, and the present Dalai Lama prayed to Dorje Shugden for many years. However in 1976 the Dalai Lama announced he was advising against the practice because it was promoting sectarianism, which could potentially damage the Tibetan independence movement. Twenty years later, in 1996, the Dalai Lama went further and announced that members of both government departments and monasteries under the control of the Tibetan exile administration were forbidden from worshipping the spirit because the ‘practice fosters religious intolerance and leads to the degeneration of Buddhism into a cult of spirit worship’. This led to a massive outcry from Shugden supporters, particularly in Britain. The Dalai Lama was accused of religious intolerance and provided an opportunity that was not missed by Beijing, who used the dispute as a further reason to denounce the Dalai Lama.

Chryssides goes on to explain the claims specifically:

The dispute between Kelsang Gyatso and the Dalai Lama admits of no obvious resolution. The Dalai Lama stands accused of restricting the religious freedom of followers of Tibetan Buddhism, and of causing widespread suffering to Shugden supporters, who are not denied access to their protector deity, but who are the victims of persecution, unable to get jobs that relate to the Tibetan government-in-exile (for example, in schools), and are denied humanitarian assistance.

Ardley explains the political nature of the controversy:

the Dalai Lama, as a political leader of the Tibetans, was at fault in forbidding his officials from partaking in a particular religious practice, however undesirable. However, given the two concepts (religious and political) remain interwoven in the present Tibetan perception, an issue of religious controversy was seen as threat to political unity. The Dalai Lama used his political authority to deal with what was and should have remained a purely religious issue. A secular Tibetan state would have guarded against this.Ardley, Jane (2002), The Tibetan Independence Movement: Political, Religious and Gandhian Perspectives, London: RoutledgeCurzon, p. 172

Rejection of New Kadampa Tradition / Western Shugden Society claims

Some scholars reject the claims of the New Kadampa Tradition (NKT) and the Western Shugden Society (WSS). Robert Thurman, for example, states, "The cult and agency attack campaign is futile since its main claims are so easy to refute." Some scholars reject NKT/WSS claims that the 14th Dalai Lama has suppressed religious freedom, indicating that the situation is actually the opposite. Thurman says, "They then went on the attack, claiming they had been 'banned' and 'excommunicated', etc., when in fact the Dalai Lama was exercising his religious freedom by not accepting students who reject his advice, and actually go so far as to condemn him!"

Thurman explains:

However, the members of the cult are not content with this situation of having to choose between adopting His Holiness the Dalai Lama as their spiritual mentor or ignoring his judgment and persisting in the Gyalpo Shugden worship. They want to force their supposed mentor to adopt their perspective that the demonic spirit is an enlightened being, almost more important than the Buddha himself, and perhaps also rejoin their worship of it, or at least give them all his initiatory teachings in spite of their defiance of his best advice. So, they feel compelled to attack His Holiness, in order to force him to join their fundamentalist version of a Gelukpa outlook.

Regarding NKT/WSS claims that there is prohibition of Shugden, and therefore a repression of religious freedom, Thierry Dodin states, "No, such a prohibition does not exist. Religious freedom is not at issue here. No one, and most definitely not the Dalai Lama, is repressing religious freedom."

Nathan W. Hill, Lecturer in Tibetan and Linguistics at SOAS, University of London, states that the Dalai Lama does not control the Indian government or any other government:

This accusation makes no sense … the Dalai Lama is not head of any state; he has no military or police at his command; he has no political jurisdiction over which he can exercise suppression. Some members of the Gelug sect left the authority of the Dalai Lama in order to follow what they see as a purer form of religion. These people may not be very popular in other parts of the Gelug sect, but their human rights have not been violated nor their freedoms suppressed; even if some people did want to suppress or silence the pro-Shugen side, they simply have no means of doing so."

Similarly, Tibet scholar Robert Barnett of Columbia University states that "ID cards are not given out by the Tibetan government in exile, but by the Indian authorities".

Barnett comments:

I also made it clear that the Western Shugden group's allegations are problematic: they are akin to attacking the Pope because some lay Catholics somewhere abuse non-believers or heretics. The Western Shugden Group is severely lacking in credibility, since its form of spirit-worship is heterodox, provocative and highly sectarian in Buddhist terms and so more than likely to be banned from mainstream monasteries – while its claimed concerns about cases of discrimination in India should be addressed by working within the Tibetan community instead of opportunistically attacking the Dalai Lama in order to provoke misinformed publicity for their sect.

Barnett noted that after the Dalai Lama prohibited his followers from engaging in Shugden rituals, Shugden practitioners in the Tibetan exile community faced persecution that the Dalai Lama's administration did not deal with particularly well, and he expressed concern that the controversy could hurt Tibetan causes. But Barnett said that claiming the difficulties faced by the Shugden practitioners are not a major human rights concern: "We see this being done under the name of human rights, which is not really quite what is at issue here."

New Kadampa Tradition demonstrations

Tibetologist Thierry Dodin states that it is the New Kadampa Tradition "that since the 1990s has held spectacular demonstrations whenever the Dalai Lama went to the West." According to Dodin, "The demonstrators are almost exclusively western monks and nuns, ordained in the New Kadampa Tradition (NKT) according to the group’s own ritual." Dodin also states, "The NKT can be described typologically as a cult on the basis of its organisational form, its excessive group pressure and blind obedience to its founder. The organisation’s extreme fanaticism and aggressive missionary drive are typical cult features too."

According to Robert Thurman, the International Shugden Community is a front group of the New Kadampa Tradition.

There is a group of former members who speak out against the New Kadampa Tradition and their demonstrations.

Chinese government involvement

A 2015 Reuters article alleged "that the religious sect behind the protests has the backing of the Communist Party" and that the "group has emerged as an instrument in Beijing’s long campaign to undermine support for the Dalai Lama". The allegations have been challenged as they were not substantiated by concrete evidence.

According to Robert Thurman, Shugden activities are financed by the United Front Work Department of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) as part of its strategy against the Dalai Lama, but there is "no documentary proof of a direct link between the NKT front groups ISC or WSS and the Communist United Front".

Raimondo Bultrini documents the Chinese government coordination of Shugden activity in the book The Dalai Lama and the King Demon.

Warren Smith asserts that within Chinese-controlled territory, the Chinese government demanded that monks worship Shugden, in conjunction with forcing them to denounce the Dalai Lama and fly the flag of China.

According to Ben Hillman,

According to one senior lama from Sichuan, the Chinese government naturally allies itself with the Shugden supporters, not just to undermine the Dalai Lama, but because most Shugden worshippers come from Eastern Tibet, from areas that were only ever loosely under Lhasa’s jurisdiction and are today integrated into the Chinese provinces of Sichuan and Yunnan. Monks who had traveled across these areas note that the central government has allocated a disproportionate amount of funds since 1996 to pro-Shugden monasteries to assist them with construction and renovations. Evidence of local government favoritism toward the pro-Shugden faction began to emerge at S Monastery in 2003 when monks applied for permission to undertake studies in India. Despite equal numbers of applications from all khangtsens, of the 12 monks who were issued travel documents, only one was from an anti-Shugden khangtsen. Similarly, in 2004, one of the monastery’s smallest and (previously) poorest khangtsens began to build an elaborate new prayer room and residence for its handful of members. Financial support had been obtained from Beijing through a network of pro-Shugden lamas with access to officials at the highest level.

According to the Tibetologist Thierry Dodin, "China had encouraged division among the Tibetans by promoting followers of the Dorje Shugden sect to key positions of authority.

He also provides a couple of examples of the Chinese government's role in Shugden activity:

For instance, the construction of Shugden temples and monasteries is being subsidised by the State. We also know that most of the teachers surrounding the young man who in 1995 was designated as the Panchen Lama by the Chinese leadership, against the will of the Dalai Lama, belong to the Shugden group. I think these examples clearly demonstrate the role China is playing in this conflict.

Also the Central Tibetan Administration in India has stated that "In order to undermine the peace and harmony within the Tibetan people, China provides political and financial support to Shugden worshippers in Tibet, India and Nepal in particular, and in general, across the globe." And, in an on-line article published by the Times of India, a source in the Religion and Culture Department of the Tibetan Government in exile is quoted as saying that Dorje Shugden followers "have their people in all Tibetan settlements. We are worried about their sources of funding. It might be China or some other anti-Tibetan elements."

In December 2012, Lama Jampa Ngodrup, a promoter of the practice of Dorje Shugden, apparently became "the first Tibetan lama to be appointed by the Chinese Government to travel on an official trip abroad to give Dharma teachings."

According to propaganda observers, “the de-facto ban issued by the 14th Dalai Lama has generated considerable social tension and division in the diaspora, as well as in Tibetan society within China, leading the Chinese government to consider the Dorje Shugden controversy an important front for undermining what it says are efforts promoted by the 14th Dalai Lama aimed at destabilizing China. The religious hostility has been fed by considerable propaganda and counterpropaganda efforts during the last two decades … Significantly sensitive are the methodical efforts of the exiled government and its supporting NGOs to silence opposing voices in the controversy, using systematic defamation and coercive methods, including the use of modern disinformation means like coordinated troll campaigns on social media.”

Dissolution of International Shugden Community

In 2015, Reuters printed allegations that the anti-Dalai Lama Shugden protest campaigns were funded and manipulated by the Chinese Communist Party in order to discredit the Dalai Lama and the so-called "Dalai clique".

On March 10, 2016, the International Shugden Community suddenly suspended all operations. Its website was closed down leaving only the following message: "A Special Announcement: The Directors of the International Shugden Community previously announced that from 1 Dec 2015 they had decided to completely stop organising demonstrations against the Dalai Lama. Now, from the 10th March 2016 the International Shugden Community itself will dissolve, including its websites. May everybody be happy. Len Foley, Representative of the International Shugden Community." They added, "We are campaigning for an end to the discrimination against the people of our faith that the Dalai Lama has created"

Tsem Tulku Rinpoche on ending the ban

Tsem Tulku Rinpoche (1965–2019), ordained at 22 by the 14th Dalai Lama, stood against the position of the Central Tibetan Administration in the Dorje Shugden controversy, and built the world's largest Dorje Shugden statue.

In February 2018, Tsem Rinpoche wrote:

ban was formalised and made official with the passing of three resolutions in the Tibetan Parliament which stated clearly the Tibetan leadership’s reasons for discouraging and banning the practice...Dorje Shugden practitioners continue to be abused, belittled, ostracised and violently discriminated against. They are denied the treatment at clinics and hospitals in the Tibetan settlements, barred from shops and restaurants, and forbidden from holding any position in the Tibetan civil service. Their children are blacklisted and bullied at school. Shugden practitioners are shunned by their family and relatives; in the community, they are treated as pariahs.

In April 2019, he penned an article titled Dalai Lama Says We Can Practise Dorje Shugden Finally! In it, he writes, "His Holiness the Dalai Lama has compassionately shown a change in approach to the Dorje Shugden situation, and we are grateful for this...The gravity and levity of His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s announcements is very, very deep and also transcends everything." Rinpoche points to a 2016 video showing comments made by the Dalai Lama, as well as an article in Phayul.com from the same year, and an article on the Dalai Lama's website, all of which he summarized thusly:

These are the things His Holiness the Dalai Lama has said recently:

  • His Holiness has said that Dorje Shugden does not harm him
  • Since it does not harm him, it does not harm the Tibetan cause because the Dalai Lama is the upholder of the Tibetan cause
  • His Holiness the Dalai Lama said we can practise Dorje Shugden
  • His Holiness the Dalai Lama even said where we can go if we want to rely on Dorje Shugden, when he tells the audience that there are monasteries adjacent to Gaden and Sera that practise Dorje Shugden (Shar Gaden Monastery and Serpom Monastery)

See also

Notes

  1. David Kay: "A key element of Phabongkha Rinpoche’s outlook was the cult of the protective deity Dorje Shugden, which he married to the idea of Gelug exclusivism and employed against other traditions as well as against those within the Gelug who had eclectic tendencies."
  2. Georges Dreyfus: "For Pa-bong-ka, particularly at the end of his life, one of the main functions of Gyel-chen Dor-je Shuk-den as Ge-luk protector is the use of violent means (the adamantine force) to protect the Ge-luk tradition This passage clearly presents the goal of the propitiation of Shuk-den as the protection of the Ge-luk tradition through violent means, even including the killing of its enemies Pa-bong-ka takes the references to eliminating the enemies of the Ge-luk tradition as more than stylistic conventions or usual ritual incantations. It may concern the elimination of actual people by the protector."
  3. David Kay: "A key element of Phabongkha Rinpoche’s outlook was the cult of the protective deity Dorje Shugden, which he married the idea of Gelug exclusivism and employed against other traditions as well as against those within the Gelug who had eclectic tendencies."
  4. Georges Dreyfus: "For Pa-bong-ka, particularly at the end of his life, one of the main functions of Gyel-chen Dor-je Shuk-den as Ge-luk protector is the use of violent means (the adamantine force) to protect the Ge-luk tradition This passage clearly presents the goal of the propitiation of Shuk-den as the protection of the Ge-luk tradition through violent means, even including the killing of its enemies Pa-bong-ka takes the references to eliminating the enemies of the Ge-luk tradition as more than stylistic conventions or usual ritual incantations. It may concern the elimination of actual people by the protector."
  5. David Kay: "It seems that during the 1940s, supporters of Phabongkha began to proclaim the fulfilment of this tradition and to maintain that the Tibetan government should turn its allegiance away from Pehar, the state protector, to Dorje Shugden. The next stage in the status elevation process was Phabongkha’s claim that Dorje Shugden had now replaced the traditional supramundane protectors of the Gelug tradition such as Mahakala, Vaisravana and, most specifically, Kalarupa (‘the Dharma-King’), the main protector of the Gelug who, it is believed, was bound to an oath by Tsong Khapa himself.""
  6. George Dreyfus: "These descriptions have been controversial. Traditionally, the Ge-luk tradition has been protected by the Dharma-king (dam can chos rgyal), the supra-mundane deity bound to an oath given to Dzong-ka-ba, the founder of the tradition. The tradition also speaks of three main protectors adapted to the three scopes of practice described in the Stages of the Path (skyes bu gsum gyi srung ma): Mahakala for the person of great scope, Vaibravala for the person of middling scope, and the Dharma-king for the person of small scope. By describing Shuk-den as "the protector of the tradition of the victorious lord Manjushri", Pa-bong-ka suggests that he is the protector of the Ge-luk tradition, replacing the protectors appointed by Dzong-ka-ba himself. This impression is confirmed by one of the stories that Shuk-den's partisans use to justify their claim. According to this story, the Dharma-king has left this world to retire in the pure land of Tushita having entrusted the protection of the Ge-luk tradition to Shuk-den. Thus, Shuk-den has become the main Ge-luk protector replacing the traditional supra-mundane protectors of the Ge-luk tradition, indeed a spectacular promotion in the pantheon of the tradition
  7. Raimondo Bultrini: "But not everyone agreed with the decision to hold that ritual in the monastery dedicated to the guardian deity of the Dalai Lamas and the Tibetan government. Among these was the Abbot of Drepung Monastery, who immediately consulted Nechung, the State Oracle. The Oracle’s silence was more explicit than a thousand words. There could not be two protectors under the same roof, wrote the abbot to His Holiness, the Thirteenth Dalai Lama. A month had gone by since Phabongka Rinpoche had conferred the initiation at Drepung. From that day the practice of the gyalpo spread like oil on water among the young students in the colleges. The Dalai Lama, aware of the risk of open conflict, decided to have Phabongka formally rebuked by a government functionary. Then he wrote to him personally, revealing how disconcerted he was by his behavior. A few days went by, and a messenger brought Phabongka’s response to the Potala, with a gold coin and a white kata. Phabongka apologized, saying it was his fault alone and that he had nothing to add in his defense: "What I have done is unjustifiable and in the future, as you have asked of me, I shall take your instructions to heart. I ask your forgiveness for what I have done and written." The Dalai Lama responded to Phabongka’s apology with a second letter, which did not entirely mask his displeasure: "There is much to be said about your words and deeds, in both in logistical and doctrinal terms, but I do not want to continue on this subject. Concerning your references to the practice of the refuge, first of all you are propitiating Shugden as a protector. And since these students now have a connection with you, the practice has notably spread at Drepung. Since the monastery was first founded by Jamyang Choejey, Nechung has been designated as guardian and protector of Drepung, and his oracle has expressed his great dissatisfaction to the abbot on several occasions, saying that appeasing Shugden has accelerated the degeneration of the Buddha’s teaching. This is the root of the problem. In particular, your search for the support of a worldly guardian to ensure benefits in this life is contrary to the principle of the taking of refuge. Therefore, it is contradictory to affirm, as you do "from the bottom of your heart", that what happened is only the fruit of your "confusion and ignorance", and that you were not aware of having "followed a wrongful path and led others onto it." Phabongka replied with apparent humility: "You have asked me why I am interested in this protector. I must explain that, according to my old mother, Shugden was a guardian for my family from the start, and that is why I have honored him. But now I want to say that I have repented and I have understood my mistake. I shall perform purification and promise with all my heart that in the future I will avoid propitiating, praying to, and making daily offerings . I admit to all the errors I have made, disturbing Nechung and contradicting the principle of the refuge, and I beg you, in your great heartfelt compassion, to forgive me and purify my actions."
  8. Raimondo Bultrini: Phabongka said "I shall perform purification and promise with all my heart that in the future I will avoid propitiating, praying to, and making daily offerings to Shugden. I admit to all the errors I have made, disturbing Nechung and contradicting the principle of the refuge, and I beg you, in your great heartfelt compassion, to forgive me and purify my actions."
  9. Raimondo bultrini: HHDL states "The previous Dudjom Rinpoche, one of the great Nyingmapa masters, once told me that Shugden was negative for the Tibetan government."
  10. ^ David Kay: "Ling Rinpoche, who was from Drepung monastery, was not a devotee of Dorje Shugden, and at the time of the dispute he naturally sided with the Dalai Lama."
  11. ^ Raimondo Bultrini: HHDL states "That same day, when I told my senior tutor Ling Rinpoche, he confessed he was very happy, since he always had harbored doubts regarding the practice. He told me it certainly was the right decision...Ling Rinpoche raised a doubt with Phabongka that was shared by many others. "If we at Drepung start to worship Shugden, isn’t there a risk of a conflict between the two that could bring us harm? Nechung will not be happy", he said."
  12. Robert Thurman: "In the late 80s', when certain individual lamas began to proselytize its cult, inducting even Western practitioners new to Buddhism, especially in England, he took the step of asking such persons to refrain from attending his initiations and associated advanced teachings, on the grounds that they were not following his advice and so should not take him as their teacher."
  13. Raimondo Bultrini: "He wrote back a few days later, attaching some confidential information on Ganchen Tulku and "Nga lama" Kundeling. In March 1998, shortly after we met, these two men were in Kathmandu, Nepal, with other Shugden followers and a member of the Communist Party of the Autonomous Region of Tibet, Gungthang Ngodup, who had come especially from Lhasa. A few days afterwards, wrote Director Ngodup, an adviser from the Chinese embassy in Nepal, one "Mr. Wang", visited Ganchen’s house. As far as he could determine, the discussion revolved around the type of collaboration to be established between the Shugden followers and the Chinese authorities, including possible financial support. In December of the same year, as reported by the Indian Express and the Tribune, the under-secretary of the Chinese embassy in Delhi, Zhao Hongang, went to the Ganden Monastery in India, accompanied by a devotee from Bylakuppe, Thupten Kunsang, and a monk who had arrived from Sera Mey. In July 1999, also in Kathmandu, other meetings were held between pro-Shugden activists and Chinese representatives. This time, "Mr. Wang" met with Chimi Tsering and other directors of the Delhi "Shugden Society", Lobsang Gyaltsen, Konchok Gyaltsen, Gelek Gyatso, and Soepa Tokhmey, the society’s treasurer. After the final meeting, a letter was drafted to be presented to the United Front Department of the Communist Party to ask for help in countering those discriminating against Shugden practitioners in India…. In January 2000, after the meeting in Kathmandu between representatives of the cult and the Chinese emissaries, the Nepal National Dorje Shugden Society was born, with an office and a full-time staff of three, paid—according to the Dharamsala Security Services—with Communist Party funds funneled through the Chinese embassy. Ganchen Tulku was on the Committee of Consultants. ….Despite the formal denials of the cult’s practitioners, the common strategy of the Chinese authorities by now was obvious. In 2001 the Chinese ambassador was guest of honor at "The Millennium Conference on Human Rights" organized by the Shugden Devotees Religious and Charitable Society of Delhi and held March 20–22 at the most prestigious venue in the Indian capital, the India International Centre. If the reports of the pro-Shugden convention financed by the embassy were only "rumor" spread by World Tibetan News, the ambassador’s presence at the Millennium Conference was hard to reconcile with his routine duties as a diplomat."

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