And though you may know a lot about his policies and his personal life, some people seemed to have forgotten one little detail about him that’s once again making the rounds ― his ink.

That’s right ― the 45-year-old has a big tattoo on his left shoulder:

Carlo Allegri / Reuters Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau prepares to train at Gleason's Boxing Gym in Brooklyn, New York, U.S., April 21, 2016.

Carlo Allegri / Reuters NBD, he boxes as well.

Chris Wattie / Reuters Trudeau (R) and conservative Senator Patrick Brazeau (L) pose after Trudeau defeated Brazeau during their charity boxing match in Ottawa March 31, 2012.

Chris Wattie / Reuters Trudeau (R) kisses his wife Sophie Gregoire after defeating conservative Senator Patrick Brazeau during their charity boxing match in Ottawa March 31, 2012.

The Prime Minister tweeted about his tattoo, which is actually a combination of two tattoos, in 2012:

.@MegBergin My tattoo is planet Earth inside a Haida raven. The globe I got when I was 23; the Robert Davidson raven for my 40th birthday. — Justin Trudeau (@JustinTrudeau) March 14, 2012

The Haida are native people that reside in the Haida Gwaii territory, British Columbia and parts of Alaska. Robert Davidson (referenced in the tweet) is a renowned Haida artist.

Part of the reason Trudeau may have gotten the tattoo is because his father, Pierre, was declared an honorary member of the Haida tribe in 1976 while he was serving as prime minister. Davidson’s grandmother “adopted” Pierre into her family’s clan when Justin Trudeau was just 4 years old.

Surprisingly, this occurred a few years after Pierre proposed a controversial policy (the 1969 White Paper) that would assimilate the native populations by eliminating their “Indian status.”

The younger Trudeau has also come under fire with the Haida after his support of the Site C dam in British Columbia.

Because of these reasons, some native people classify Trudeau’s tattoos as a form of cultural appropriation.

“It’s like me getting a basketball tattooed to my shoulder,” Haida tattoo artist Gregory Williams told Macleans magazine in 2016. “I don’t play basketball.”