LIFESTYLES E AST O REGONIAN MARCH 4-5, 2017 BEAUTIFUL PRISON On a remote Hawaiian island, nine patients remain at a 151-year-old leper colony Story and photos by KATHY ANEY ♦ EAST OREGONIAN This is the view seen by thousands of leprosy patients exiled to a remote peninsula on Hawaii’s island of Molokai. T our guide Rick Schonely summed up the story of Molokai’s leprosy colony in one succinct sentence. “What started as a nightmare in 1866 has a happy ending.” 1866 was the year 12 leprosy patients arrived at Kalaupapa. They were the fi rst of more than 8,000 people forcibly removed from their families and exiled to this isolated peninsula on the windward side of Hawaii’s island of Molokai. They came by sea and lived out their lives in isolation, trapped by a topography of battering surf and towering seawalls. Schonely, the son of Portland Trail Blazers broadcasting legend Bill Schonely, told the story as he drove a rusted yellow Kathy school bus around the tiny Aney settlement, keeping up a high-energy commentary about the colony’s past and present. Though the state lifted the quarantine in 1969 after a cure became available, he said, many residents stayed by choice. Nine remain. The state of Hawaii has promised to provide room, board and health care until they die. My husband, Bill, and I relaxed in the jostling bus and listened to Schonely with curiosity. We had hiked roughly three miles into the colony earlier that morning down a rugged pathway that descended almost 1,700 feet. The route includes 26 switchbacks and about 1,800 steps made of cinder block and rock. Only 100 people may visit the community daily after walking or riding a mule or fl ying in by air taxi, securing reservations through one of two Kalaupapa tour companies. At the top of the trail that morning, we Clarence “Uncle Boogie” Kahilihiwa greets a group of visitors to Kalaupapa, where he was forced to move in 1959 after being diag- nosed with lep- rosy. The native Hawaiian runs the bookstore. Those hiking down to Kalaupapa will descend about 1,800 steps and navigate 26 switch- backs before reaching the historic leper colony on Hawaii’s island of Molokai. came across a sign forbidding anyone to proceed without permission and warning of no medical services. On the way down, we occasionally dared to pull our eyes from the rocky, muddy trail to observe feral goats, cardinals and other creatures amid thick foliage. At the bottom, we joined a group of people sitting on bleachers awaiting two tour guides. Everyone in our group of 11 had booked through a company called Damien Tours. The owner, Gloria Marks, came to Kalaupapa with leprosy, “I have learned much from them,” or Hansen’s disease as most at the Schonely said. “They teach us to live colony prefer to call the affl iction. Marks aloha every day.” arrived at Kalaupapa at age 21 and is Schonely stopped the bus regularly so known as Auntie Gloria. We headed to we could troop off and wander through the Kalaupapa bar where she sat behind churches, graveyards, a convent and a a table and checked off our names. She bookstore. In the bookstore doorway took our $60 apiece and smiled up at stood Clarence Kahilihiwa, known in us, scars visible on her beautiful face. Kalaupapa as Uncle Boogie. Uncle The bacterial disease causes disfi guring Boogie, who runs the bookstore, fl ashed skin lesions, nerve damage and muscle a wide smile and offered a strong weakness. handshake. At 76, he is a youngster After the group clambered back among the patients. He bantered with his aboard the bus, visitors in Hawaiian Schonely slowly English. He was cruised the streets. The “I have learned- diffi cult for most to colony, now a National understand, but his Historic Park managed much from them. joie de vivre was by the National Park unmistakable. They teach us Service and the State Another stop was of Hawaii Department St. Francis Catholic to live aloha Church where we of Health, is Mayberry- esque, featuring a at portraits every day.” gazed library, movie house, of two Kalaupapa post offi ce, YMCA, heroes: Father Damien — Rick Schonely, bookstore, clinic, and Sister Marianne tour guide athletic fi eld, churches Cope. The pair is a and even a horseracing dynamic duo in the track. Some facilities colony – both were are no longer in eventually declared operation now that the patient population saints by Pope Benedict XVI. has dwindled. The jail, for example, Father Damien, a Roman Catholic provides storage instead of housing for priest from Belgium, spent 16 years wrongdoers. caring for the lepers. He eventually The bus passed a long skinny contracted leprosy himself and died at graveyard bordering the little age 49. Schonely called him “champion community. The graves, along with of the lepers.” others peppering the area, remind one At our next stop, the Kalaupapa of how many died here. Even so, only convent and the Bishop Home for girls, about 1,300 of those who died have Sister Alisha Damien Lau talked about marked gravestones. Thousands more Sister Marianne. Lau, a nurse who are buried in a large fi eld. divides her time between Oahu and When Schonely arrived in Kalaupapa Molokai, said the German-born sister about three decades ago, about 200 of and her cohort of nuns dispensed plenty the patients were still alive. He said he of love as they cared for the disfi gured gleaned many life lessons from these girls of Kalaupapa. people, who live fully despite their See KALAUPAPA/4C circumstances.