WHEN Ben Loke wanted to boost his financial prospects, he approached neither his banker nor his broker. Instead, the 35-year-old company executive asked a professional tattooist to ink on his back a 'sak yant' religious symbol which he hoped would bring him wealth and happiness.
'I'm a Buddhist, and the scriptures that are being tattooed on my back will give me some protection,' he said as he prepared to go under a needle wielded by a visiting Thai expert.
The sak yant form of tattooing originated in Thailand and is gaining popularity in Singapore, a predominantly ethnic Chinese city-state with a strong Buddhist and Taoist tradition. Sak yant tattoos, mainly inscriptions of religious texts and animals as well as deity figures, are believed by Buddhists to bring good fortune, courage and self-confidence.
It is Mr Loke's second sak yant tattoo and sits beneath a dragon surrounded by lines of Buddhist text. Tattoos have come a long way in Singapore. Once associated with gangsters, they are now widely used as expressions of individuality, fashion statements or invitations to divine assistance.
Willie Heng, sales executive of Fo Guang Hang, a company specialising in sak yant tattooing, welcomed the growing acceptance of the practice. 'Sak yant is now widely embraced by the general population because of people's need for a form of spiritual support, aided by the social acceptance of tattoos,' he told AFP at a recent tattoo convention in Singapore.
More than 300 tattoo artists from around the world, including Chris Garver of the hit television series Miami Ink, attended the Singapore Tat2 Show 2010. But it was Fo Guang Hang's tattoo specialist Ajahn Thong, 60, who drew one of the largest crowds. Business was so good that Mr Thong, a Thai sak yant 'grandmaster' who flew to Singapore for the show, had to extend his stay after the event to attend to all his customers, Mr Heng said. -- AFP
Any pictures of a Buddhist tattoo? Just curious : >
Originally posted by Ribena.Romanticons:Any pictures of a Buddhist tattoo? Just curious : >
here you go..
http://www.straitstimes.com/BreakingNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_490477.html
Can they do it in henna or removable ink. My apologies if this is a stupid question...
just to dispel this, there are no such thing as buddhist tattoo, none whatsoever.
if there is such a thing as tattoo, then it is not related to buddhism.
looks occult....