Once worn by nearly every Ryukyuan woman, these intricate hand tattoos were outlawed for over a century.
These sacred tattoos were banned in Okinawa. A new generation is bringing them back.
Once worn by nearly every Ryukyuan woman, these intricate hand tattoos were outlawed for over a century.
By Haley Harrison
Inside a small tatami room just outside the center of Naha, the capital of Okinawa Prefecture, a quiet rebirth of a once-banned tattoo practice is taking place.Ā Moeko Heshiki, one of the few remainingĀ hajichaas, lays out her stick-and-poke tools with practiced care. My eyes are drawn to the long, dark arrows that trace the length of her fingersāa sacred art now nearly lost.
I tell her that the last woman in my lineage to haveĀ hajichiĀ tattoos was my great-great-grandmother, the weight of both pride and loss settling over me.
āPeople sometimes tell me, āOh, you opened a box,ā she says, alluding to the cultural practices Okinawans were forced to lock away. Soon, the tattoos that once marked the hands of generations of Okinawan women will mark my own.
The colonization of Ryukyu
Long before U.S. military bases lined its shores, the islands known today as Okinawa were once the independentĀ Ryukyu Kingdom. In 1879, Japanās Meiji government annexed the islands, abolishing the kingdom and absorbing the newly named Okinawa Prefecture into its empire.
Ryukyuan sovereignty was dismantled on all fronts: communal lands were seized and redistributed, the indigenous languages were prohibited, and the political and social systems in which women held positions of leadership were overthrown.Ā
Adriane Tengan-Stoia and Lex McClellanāUfugusuku, doctoral students at the University of California, Santa Cruz, explain that women were the spiritual leaders in Ryukyuan society and were believed to possess a divine connection to the spiritual realm.Ā
āBefore Western intervention and Japanese colonization, theĀ chifijing ganashi me,Ā or high priestess, served as the king's counterpart,ā says Tengan-Stoia. McClellanāUfugusuku adds that the new Meiji government āwanted to put heteropatriarchy firmly in the Ryukyus as it was in Japanā and began persecuting women in positions of power and targeting their cultural traditions.
As a result, hajichiāhand-poked markings that adorned the hands, wrists, and fingers of Ryukyuan women for centuriesāwas banned.
In the days of Ryukyu, girls as young as six would begin their hajichi journey by receiving two small circles, calledĀ tontonmi, between their knuckles. As they grew and reached new milestones, such as getting married, mastering complicated weaving techniques, or turning 60, so did their tattoos.Ā











