In Myanmar, everyone swears by this natural skin cosmetic

People use thanaka as a beauty aid. It’s said to soften the skin, prevent wrinkles and sunburn, and keep mosquitoes away.

By Paul Salopek
Published 3 Sept 2020, 10:14 BST
Mi Mi Shaw, 16, staffs an electronics shop in Shwebo, Myanmar, wearing a daily coat of ...

Mi Mi Shaw, 16, staffs an electronics shop in Shwebo, Myanmar, wearing a daily coat of thanaka, a pale yellow paste made from pulverized tree bark.

Photograph by Paul Salopek
Writer and National Geographic Fellow Paul Salopek’s Out of Eden Walk is a storytelling odyssey across the world in the footsteps of our human forebears. This is his latest dispatch from Myanmar.

When did human beings first decorate their oldest canvas: the body?

It is impossible to say. The primordial evidence—the hides of Stone Age peoples—has long since turned to dust. Yet clues remain. A rouge-coloured mineral called ochre has been discovered, finely ground and ready for application, inside a 100,000-year-old abalone shell in South Africa. Other archaeological finds suggest that cosmetic pigments were used by pre-human ancestors as long ago as a quarter of a million years. Vanity is very old, indeed.

Today in Myanmar, or Burma, this ancient human impulse for self-beautification remains on bold display everywhere. Women, men, and children of all backgrounds wear thanaka, a pale yellow paste made from pulverised tree bark that is painted artfully or daubed carelessly onto their faces. (Watch how people in Myanmar use thanaka.)

Unlike modern industrial cosmetics, thanaka is not meant to be subtle, to hide flaws or accentuate features. It is a sun-bright symbol of health and beauty. It blazes on millions of cheeks and foreheads for all to see. Wizened old farmers in Myanmar slap on thanaka. Young clerks at urban boutiques draw stylized patterns across their skin with the paste. Children march to school with thanaka smeared, hastily, onto their faces by mothers.

Ar Kar Phyo, 6, wears a liberal smearing of thanaka to his primary school near Ye U.

Photograph by Paul Salopek

“It makes the skin softer. It takes away pimples and rashes,” explained U Nyo, 55, a farmer whose property is dotted with thanaka trees, the source of the popular skin balm. “The wild trees are best, especially those planted by birds who eat the fruit. Cultivated trees lose their power.”

U Nyo even takes a spoonful of the pulverised bark by mouth every morning, washed down with a cup of water. It’s an elixir for general good health, he said.

The first historical reference to thanaka appears in a poem from the court of King Rajadhirat, the 14th-century unifier of Burma. But the pigment’s use likely goes back much further. Today, the organic skin beautifier is so ubiquitous across Myanmar’s communities—Buddhists, Muslims, and smaller ethnic minorities—that it has become a symbol of Burmese culture on par with the longyi, the sarong-like national skirt worn by men and women alike.

Women, men, and children of all backgrounds wear thanaka, painted artfully or daubed carelessly onto their faces.

Photograph by Tino Soriano, Nat Geo Image Collection

“There is no comparison with modern makeup,” said Ma Tin Hla, 36, a thanaka seller in what might be called the champagne heartland of the natural pigment—the hot, dry plains of central Myanmar, near the city of Mandalay. “Store-bought cosmetics actually destroy your complexion. Thanaka does the exact opposite. It repairs it.”

Like all regular users of the pigment, Ma Tin Hla ascribed powers to thanaka that extend far beyond simply prettying a face. The paste functions as a sunblock, she said. It combats wrinkles. It keeps mosquitoes away. And its antibiotic qualities, she added, serve to control acne—though a recent scientific study appears to discount this claim.

The raw material for thanaka comes from specific trees such as Naringi crenulata and Limonia acidissima, colloquially known as wood-apple, sandalwood, elephant-apple, or curd fruit trees. The preparations are laborious.

The trees’ branches are sawed into hand-size segments on farms and in forests. Then, at markets, temples, roadside stalls, and in homes, the thin layer of bark is scraped away for hours on small slate grinding stones. The end product looks like dry cornflour. Reconstituted with water and applied with fingers and sticks, it dries to a light golden crust on the skin. Delicate leaf patterns are a common thanaka style among younger users.

“Anyone in the world can put on cheap lipstick,” said Han Ni, 26, a beautician who applied the pigment for tips at Kuthodaw pagoda, in Mandalay. “Only we know the beauty of thanaka.”

This story was originally published on the National Geographic Society’s website devoted to the Out of Eden Walk project. Explore the site here.
Paul Salopek won two Pulitzer Prizes for his journalism while a foreign correspondent with the Chicago Tribune. Follow him on Twitter @paulsalopek.
loading

Explore Nat Geo

  • Animals
  • Environment
  • History & Culture
  • Science
  • Travel
  • Photography
  • Space
  • Adventure
  • Video

About us

Subscribe

  • Magazines
  • Disney+

Follow us

Copyright © 1996-2015 National Geographic Society. Copyright © 2015-2023 National Geographic Partners, LLC. All rights reserved