More than a century ago, in a more orthodox and casteist India, a group of Dalits (untouchables) did the unthinkable: they rose up against the decree of the privileged and priestly class forbidding them to visit or enter the temples. Their mode of protest was unique. The untouchables tattooed every inch of their skin with the name of the Hindu god Rama, turning their bodies into temples. This act of defiance earned the group of Satnamis the nickname Ramnami (Ram's people), which persists to this day.















