Edmonton Journal

ABANDONED IN PARADISE

Hawaii’s leper colony held so much sorrow, yet so much compassion

- M.L. LYKE

My old mule clopped straight to the edge of the first switchback. One more step and we’d tumble down a sheer cli , falling almost 500 metres to the sea.

But mules are smart and, at the last instant, she swivelled 120 degrees onto the next leg of the rugged path that zigzags down to the historic leper colony of Kalaupapa.

The isolated site is the No. 1 tourist destinatio­n on the untouristy Hawaiian island of Molokai.

I felt a little queasy on that first switchback, leaning back in the saddle, bracing in my stirrups against the pitch, thinking, “Whoa, that’s a long way down.”

Luckily, bushes blocked some of the most vertigo-inducing views.

She was an ornery mule, tailgating shamelessl­y and working the scary outside edge of the trail. But I knew she knew her stu . So, after that first turn, I put my reins around the saddle horn and let her make the calls as we plodded downhill.

The promontory below us — formed of lava, hammered by rough seas and swept by winds — became Hawaii’s famed leper colony starting in the 1860s, almost eight decades before an antibiotic treatment was found to arrest the disease.

It was segregated from the rest of the island by some of the tallest sea cli s in the world.

More than 8,000 exiles would die there, many disfigured, crippled and blinded by the sickness now commonly called Hansen’s disease.

At its peak, it had more than 1,200 residents: men, women and children. Today, only a handful remain, all elderly, along with the dozens of workers who manage what is now designated the Kalaupapa National Historical Park.

Only 100 visitors are allowed in each day. They must have permits and cannot talk to the former patients, take their photos or enter their properties. No one under age 16 is allowed.

Visitors arrive by small plane, mule or by hiking the cli trail, an arduous trek for the very fit. The five-kilometre trail is slippery in rain, subject to rockfalls and landslides, and narrows to a few feet in some spots.

National park service workers occasional­ly pluck exhausted hikers o the trail, calling for mule rescue or rolling the a icted down the hill on a wheeled gurney to be flown to outside islands for medical care.

Mule trips pose their own risks. Riders can fall, or — if they shriek, freak or try to micromanag­e these heavily muscled, independen­t animals — be pitched o .

Which is why operators at the long-standing Kalaupapa Mule Tour take tourists’ insurance informatio­n, require them to sign waivers and stick to hard rules. It’s OK if you don’t have equestrian experience — guides will explain what to do — but you can’t weigh more than 250 pounds or be pregnant, and you must be in good health.

I would add one more caveat: If you can’t trust an animal, don’t go.

All three ways of getting to Kalaupapa are expensive. The total for my mule trip, with taxes and fees, was $230.

It was pricey, but I had to go. Locals had told me Kalaupapa was a “must-do,” a sacred place with a “special feel.” Every time I pressed for details, there were no more words. “Go. You’ll see for yourself. You’ll know.”

To prepare, I read interviews with longtime residents. They told of being tracked down at home by bounty hunters who got $10 for each suspected leprosy victim. As children, many were yanked from school and quickly sent to Kalaupapa still crying for their mothers.

Many were shunned by friends and relatives. But there were also family members who demanded to come with their loved ones, regardless of risk. These were the kokua, the helpers.

I also read up on Father Damien, canonized in 2009. The hearty, handy 33-year-old Catholic priest came to the first settlement in 1873 determined to improve the lives of the sick and save their souls for Christ, constructi­ng for them sturdy buildings and, sometimes daily, helping build their co ns and dig their graves.

Only a small percentage of humans are susceptibl­e to the disease, but Damien was one of them. He died in 1889, nearly blind and covered in festering lesions.

I thought about these stories as our 11-mule train neared the trail’s bottom. My thighs were burning and my knees were sti and numb as I dismounted and looked up, stunned by the intimidati­ng green cli we’d just come down — and would be going back up.

Before boarding the tour bus, I asked our guide, Norman Soares, about a restrictio­n that puzzled me. Why no one under 16? Because infants born here were taken away from parents immediatel­y after birth for fear of contagion.

Residents also grieved for children they’d left behind when they were forced into quarantine. They needed no reminders. “Some patients are still dealing with that brokenness,” Soares said.

Sea captains with boatloads of new patients would anchor on an island just o shore, sometimes telling already frightened passengers to jump overboard and swim for shore in rough seas.

I thought about how these exiles made a life for themselves, creating a community that bonded together, celebrated together, married, buried and mourned together.

“In Kalaupapa,” said one resident, “we are all in the same boat; we help one another.”

 ?? PHOTOS: M.L. LYKE FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? The historic Kalaupapa leper colony on the Hawaiian island of Molokai was establishe­d in the 1860s. Only a handful of residents remain today.
PHOTOS: M.L. LYKE FOR THE WASHINGTON POST The historic Kalaupapa leper colony on the Hawaiian island of Molokai was establishe­d in the 1860s. Only a handful of residents remain today.
 ??  ?? Mules take visitors on a five-kilometre, vertigo-inducing trek to Kalaupapa, a leper colony formed before a treatment for the disease was discovered.
Mules take visitors on a five-kilometre, vertigo-inducing trek to Kalaupapa, a leper colony formed before a treatment for the disease was discovered.

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