Article 6X225 Native American women are bringing back facial tattoos: ‘We’re a living culture’

Native American women are bringing back facial tattoos: ‘We’re a living culture’

by
Adria R Walker
from US news | The Guardian on (#6X225)

A collective is breathing new life into inchunwa for south-eastern Indigenous people across the US

Receiving her inchunwa was not something Faithlyn Taloa Seawright did lightly, but when the moment just felt right", she knew it was time. Seawright, who was the 2024 Miss Indian Oklahoma and a previous Chickasaw Princess, had long studied the tradition that she inherited from her ancestors.

In Choctaw and Chickasaw languages, inchunwa means to be marked, branded or tattooed". So receiving inchunwa, or traditional Indigenous tattoos, is something that must be done with reverence, Seawright said. The practice was once common among the south-eastern Indigenous nations (Choctaw, Chickasaw, Cherokee and others), but after colonization the tradition faded away for many.

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