Skin deep: Sindh’s indigenous tattoo culture at risk of fading away

Skin deep: Sindh’s indigenous tattoo culture at risk of fading away

“These tattoos are the only belongings that remain with us till our last breath because everything else in this world remains here.”

Rattni, 55, remembers clear as day when she got her first tattoo at 13 years of age. It was her mother that gave it to her. “In our community, when a girl nears the age of her first menstrual period, we [the mothers] make a tattoo on her body. Likewise, when they get married,” she said.

Rattni’s neck, cheek, forearm, wrist, and the back side of her palm all bear different tattoos, each with a distinct story. She pointed towards 13-year-old Kamli Mewasi sat next to her, “She is still young so she could only get two tattoos, but as she grows older she will get more tattoos on her body like me.”

“These tattoos are the only belongings that remain with us till our last breath because everything else in this world remains here. We wish to get more tattoos on our bodies so that we die with such signs on our body parts. It may please God as well as our souls. We really feel incomplete without them,” she added.

Scroll to Top