![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjydY6itOC9sK1r2sv4MAqDCJXkWiO1tAYx6sS6cAaY55O5JvDSzakWvGVDuEhzXCqZfHQGqrhdmwTPTuzdZZQXIDoc6YeKf600JZrrg6g_fmR-Ut-gMdq1trkJvdkqjueUxNvD60OHxpc/s320/my-father-obeys.gif)
But what do we see on the bottom? Is it Hebrew writing? Lets take a peek!
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjrEVBNR9brQ15dNlE70nFGwDqDZ_dcvI2pWlR3ylYIltgYL7_5LwEgV41QcNoZnygQ2Mz5UZCx_aNfGQKoRCwi1aQ3MikIaDI_QvFs4KiLYyNQ2MvLFRoiyNJYKL0In7z7EJ2Myz2qiiI/s320/my-father-obeys2.gif)
Right. This is where well crafted ends.
From a first glance, this Hebrew tattoo just looks weird. Apostrophes and double-quotes everywhere! When you really think about it, however, you may realize they are not apostrophes or double-quotes after all. Instead, it's the letter Yod - the bastardized version.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiTLkzLjaNow_F7tWrYO2nYdVVreqzY5UmOLN87xZ7e-suFYEZ11FBi1Z27uWlddRaConz0hKxNG8xuKOOVTwBSmZ5FLKdLqKFWXMnXVsiyMTDwanhLjlL4gpTTMwqN4iONWmw_DAUEnLg/s320/apostrophe-yod.gif)
Now that the letters are all sorted, this tattoo reads:
"My father is a soldier of God and his crowd[misspelled]. My father obeys"
Did he mean to say that? I honestly don't know.