That little girl in the middle there is Tea Turalija. She grew up in 
Bosnia and Herzegovina surrounded by tattooed women. Every day she would
 plant kisses on her great grandmother's hands, thinking nothing of the 
etchings on her arms. When she got older, Tea discovered that all the 
inked-up old folk around her were from the final generation of a secret 
Catholic cult that developed while Bosnia was being occupied by the 
Ottoman Empire. The cult members identified each other by tattooing 
their hands and arms using a compound ink that was made up, in part, of 
human breast milk.
     Ethnic Croatian Catholic communities in Bosnia suffered hell under the 
Turks during the Ottoman reign, with the majority of them forced to 
convert to Islam. Girls were raped, children were taken to Turkey as 
slaves and Turkish Chiefs had the right to sleep with Christian women on
 their wedding nights before the bride's husband even got a look in. 
Lame. In response to such violations, women took to tattooing themselves on 
their hands, fingers, chests and foreheads with crosses and other 
ancient ornaments. They believed such practices would create a spiritual
 guard that would ward off the Turks, or would at least let people know 
they were once Catholic before undergoing a forced conversion.
     At the height of the cult, mothers took to tattooing their children at 
home, usually before they were ten years old. The tattooing process 
involves using a crude needle and a special solution made of charcoal, 
grime, honey and milk extracted from the bosom of a lactating woman who 
has already had a male child. "We used mother's milk from the woman who has a male child because only
 that milk was good for tattooing," claims Tea. "We also believe this 
kind of milk can cure eye pain."
     Although the cult outlasted the Ottoman oppressors, communist 
authorities made tattooed women targets of hate campaigns. Threatened 
and treated like criminals, they would often lose their jobs due to 
their religious allegiances. Eventually women stopped tattooing their 
children out of fear and the practice was more or less extinct by the 
1950s.According to Tea, tattooing was neccessary during the Turkish occupation
 of Bosnia and Herzegovina so that the children could be protected from 
kidnapping. Many had their names or initials tattooed into the skin to 
prevent their identity being taken from them.
     One woman spoke to Tea in mystic tones about the tattooing process. 
"There was a paraffin lamp," she began, "milk was taken from the woman 
who feeds a male child and it was mixed with the soot from the lamp. 
Then she took the needle, dipped it and tattooed a cross on my hands 
until the blood ran. My hand was numb so I didn't feel anything. She 
wrapped it and I held it like that for one day without washing."
       Tea herself has not yet been tattooed. "I would love to one day," she 
told me, "but only using the tattoos of my people, because they are a 
part of our identity and carry the meaning that no other tattoo could 
have for me. If I have children one day, I will give them these tattoos 
for protection, so that they know who they are. I would like them to be 
tattooed with mother's milk, as it was always done. The only problem is 
we would have to have some help from a modern tattoo artist, because the
 people who knew how to do it the traditional way are not alive 
anymore."
- Text via 'The Croatian Tattooed Grandma Cult' by Alex Hoban via Vice UK, here.
 































