A cemetery in Kalaupapa, Malokai, HI
A cemetery in Kalaupapa, Molokai, HI. A prominent grave is surrounded by a railing and is covered with white flowers. The cemetery is encircled by a low wall of stacked stones.
The five-square mile Kalaupapa Peninsula is located on the larger Makanalua Peninsula. A rich and beautiful landscape, it was home for almost 1,000 years to native Hawaiians, who farmed from the land and fished from the sea. The area was cleared by desperate officials in 1865, its residents turned away to provide a place to isolate victims of Hansen’s disease, also known as leprosy, during the Hawaiian epidemic of the late 1800s. The area, surrounded by the Pacific Ocean on three sides and 2,000 foot cliffs on the fourth, is inaccessible except by water and air. This made it the perfect location to prevent the spread of the disease, which at that time had no cure or treatment, but the decision uprooted a generation of Hawaiians from their native land and tore many loved ones from their families. Hawaii’s isolation laws were finally abolished in 1969, and remaining patients were allowed to relocate if they chose to.






