The Healing Ink project brought artists from
Israel, Europe and the United States to Jerusalem for the event,
which took place at the city's Israel Museum.
The 11 people receiving tattoos on Monday included a military
veteran injured by an anti-tank missile on a battlefield and a
woman caught in a bomb at a Tel Aviv nightspot.
"It makes me feel like I got something that I chose to put on
myself, unlike my injury, which I didn't choose to get," said
Ben Baker Morag, who was injured while serving as a soldier with
the Israeli army.
"This gives me a very good feeling," he said of his tattoo, a
lion on his left shoulder.
Israelis have in recent decades contended with a Palestinian
uprising in the occupied territories, wars against Islamist
guerrillas in the Gaza Strip and Lebanon and occasional fire
from Syria and an insurgency in the Egyptian Sinai.
Others being tattooed at the event chose designs of a medieval
knight in armor, the Beatles lyric "all you need is love," and
three monster heads eating each other.
For the artists involved, the experience of working with the
injured is a meaningful one.
"I am not a doctor, I cannot heal people," said Wassim Razzouk,
a Palestinian tattoo artist from Jerusalem's Old City.
"But with my ink and with my art if that could help heal people,
for me that is something so great."
(Reporting by Amir Cohen; Writing by Mark Hanrahan in London;
Editing by Matthew Mpoke Bigg)
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