Amazigh Facial Tattoos in Morocco Vanish Amid Shifting Religious Attitudes
The tradition of facial tattoos among Amazigh tribeswomen is fading. ©AFP

In Morocco's Atlas Mountains, the tradition of facial tattoos among Amazigh tribeswomen is fading due to changing religious beliefs. Once symbols of beauty and protection, these tattoos now face opposition from conservative interpretations of Islam.

As a young girl growing up in the Atlas Mountains, Hannou Mouloud's family took her to have her chin tattooed with the cherished lines that generations of Moroccan Amazigh tribeswomen wore. 

"When I was six, they told me tattoos were pretty adornments," recalled the 67-year-old from Imilchil village, referring to the once-common practice among women in North Africa's Amazigh groups. 

Long referred to as Berbers, many tribespeople from the area prefer to be called Amazigh, or Imazighen, which means "free people." 

Today, like in many Indigenous cultures around the world where facial tattoos were once prevalent, the practice has largely faded. 

Many attribute the near-disappearance of facial tattoos to Morocco's changing religious attitudes in recent decades, with interpretations of Islam where inked skin and other body modifications like piercings are prohibited taking hold. 

"We would use charcoal to draw the designs on our faces, then a woman would prick the drawing with a needle until blood came out," Mouloud told AFP, adding that they would rub the wound daily with a chewed green herb to deepen the tattoo's color. 

The markings varied in design between the minority's tribes and were used to signify the wearer's origin while offering beauty and protection. 

Being tattooed would hurt, said Hannou Ait Mjane, 71, and "we couldn't hold back our tears," but it "remains a tradition that our ancestors passed down to us." 

Fundamentalism 

Morocco has the largest Amazigh population in North Africa, with Tamazight, the community's language, recognized as an official language alongside Arabic. 

According to the most recent census in 2014, more than a quarter of Morocco's 35 million inhabitants speak at least one dialect — Tarifit, Tamazight, or Tachelhit. 

Abdelouahed Finigue, a geography teacher and researcher from Imilchil, told AFP that women often had their chins, foreheads, or hands tattooed. 

"Some women had intimate areas tattooed as a wedding gift, expressing their love for their husband," he added. 

The designs held different meanings across different communities. 

"The woman, through her tattoos, expresses her beauty and her value as an individual independent of the man," he said, explaining what the different shapes can mean. 

"The circle, for example, represents the universe and beauty, just like the moon and the sun, which occupied an important place in local rites," he said. 

But changing religious trends mean fewer women are getting inked. 

"In recent years, this custom has been tainted by preconceived ideas from Salafist currents," he added, referring to a Sunni Islamist movement that seeks to return to the practices and teachings of the Prophet Mohammed.  

Bassou Oujabbour, a member of the local development association AKHIAM, said women with the markings have faced social pressure. 

“Some fundamentalists describe tattooing as the devil’s work or as the first thing to be burned on the human body,” he said. 

“Some women even removed the tattoos long after getting them, for fear of punishment after death.”

With AFP

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