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Kalaupapa National Historical ParkKalaupapa Views
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Kalaupapa National Historical Park
Isolation of Hansen's Disease
 
Brother Joseph Dutton surounded by several Hansen's Disease patients
Looking back, the pain of separation seems worse than the pain of disease. Now we ask, why did this happen? Why were almost 8,000 people torn from their families and sent into isolation, most for the rest of their lives? Kalaupapa serves as a reminder of a nation in crisis, when Hawaiian people were dying from introduced diseases for which they had no immunities. Options for preventing the spread of contagious diseases were few. Isolation for leprosy seemed like the best solution, but it came at a high personal cost. Kalaupapa, once a community in isolation, now serves as a place for education and contemplation. It is a place where many families in Hawai`i reconnect with a grandparent or great-grandparent once considered "lost." It is a place where past suffering has given way to personal pride about accomplishments in the face of adversity. It is a place where each of us can reconsider our emotional and physical responses to people with disfiguring disabilities or illnesses. It is a place where the land has the power to heal—because of its human history, natural history, and stunning physical beauty.
Aerial Map of Peniinsula  

Did You Know?
The Hawaiian place name, Kalaupapa, translates into "flat leaf" which is what the peninsula appears as off the north pali coast of the island of Moloka'i.

Last Updated: July 25, 2006 at 00:22 EST