Sacred tattoos, called 'sak yant' in Thailand, have been around
Southeast Asia for centuries and afford protection from accident,
misfortune, and crime. Young women get tattooed with love charms in
order to attract partners, while adolescent men use the protective power
of their yants in fights with rival youth gangs. For most though, the
tattoos serve as reminders to follow a moral code that endorses positive
behavior. During the application of a sak yant, the tattoo master
establishes a series of life 'rules' that need to be closely adhered to,
starting with Buddhism's first five precepts. Failure to observe the
master's instructions will cause the sak yant to lose their power.
Beautifully photographed these are tattoos that are the essence and
'key' to individual identity, a philosophy for living, the translation
of soul to skin, as complex as the leaves of an autobiography, the story
of a life.