
Blood and Tattoos in the Work of Uri Katzenstein | By Yasmine Bergner
“These people who agreed to tattoo my work on themselves are a kind of erotic messengers for me,” Katzenstein told me a few years ago,

Wetiko | The Greatest Epidemic Known to Humanity | By Paul Levy
“Watiko” is a concept that comes from the Cree tribe in North America, a word that expresses a psychological illness that affects self-destructive human behavior.

Why It’s Critical for Women to Heal the Wound of Motherhood | By Bethany Webster | Translated by Yasmin Bergner
Many do not understand that the fundamental issue underlying women’s empowerment is the mother’s wound. Difficulties and challenges between mothers and daughters are violent, unrestrained,

The One and Only Form | The Science of Sacred Geometry | By Yasmine Bergner
Originally published in “Hayim Aherim” (Other Life) Magazine In human beings, there are innate “super-patterns” of thought and emotion are embedded, which Carl Gustav Jung

The Field Child | Interview with Nassim Haramein #2 | Interviewer: Yasmine Bergner
In the first part of the article, we talked about a new technology being developed in the Ramin lab. Last year, the first version of

The Field Child | Interview with Nassim Haramein #1 | Interviewer: Yasmine Bergner
“Modern science’s refusal to search for a higher order is slowing down the development of humanity and severely damaging the ecosystems on which we depend

The History of Tattoo Culture in Israel | By Yasmine Bergner
In recent years, we have witnessed an exciting process of tattoo revival in our region, albeit belatedly. Why is the tattoo renaissance coming to Israel

Body Modification and Tattoos in Africa and the Middle East | By Yasmine Bergner
It is possible that the practice of body adornment dates back approximately 100,000 years, or even earlier. Shells and bone tools discovered in Blombos Cave

What’s Up with Men? The Mother’s Wound as the Missing Link in Understanding Misogyny | Bethany Webster
Amid a brave surge of women coming forward with accounts of sexual harassment across industries, many of us, both women and men, are beginning to

The Murder of the Philosopher Hypatia and the History of Misogyny | By Yasmine Bergner
In the spring of 415 AD, a pagan noblewoman emerged from the lecture hall attached to the Great Library of Alexandria and called for her

Mark of Shame & Symbol of Protection | Article By Yasmine Bergner
Currently, a fascinating exhibition is being displayed at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, curated by Haim Maor (curator of the university galleries) in collaboration with

Rebooting the Swastika | Article by Yasmine Bergner
The deep wounds left by the Holocaust and World War II have cemented the swastika in our consciousness as an image that symbolizes satanic evil,

Body Reclamation of the Symbol | Article by Yasmine Bergner
Until not long ago, the art world ignored the field of tattooing, excluding it and labeling it as primitive and inferior, but in recent years

To Experience Pain in a Controlled Way | An Article by Yasmine Bergner
In an exhibition that addresses American tattoo culture, Rona Yifman continues to observe personas that operate with a sense of oppression, and discovers a humanity

“And cleave unto Him” | Tattoos in Judaism | Article by Yasmine Bergner
Contrary to popular belief, the Jews of the Biblical era maintained a rich folk tattoo culture. The common view is that Jewish faith categorically forbids