Jutting out from perilously steep sea cliffs, Kalaupapa Peninsula is a remote windswept outpost with a difficult history as the place where thousands of people afflicted with Hansen鈥檚 disease were banished to live segregated from the rest of society.

Maui County locator mapConditions were so deplorable in the early and mid-1800s that being cast off to Kalaupapa was synonymous with certain death.

Nine patients remain of the many former leprosy patients who chose to continue to live in Kalaupapa despite the 1969 repeal of the Hawaii law that exiled them there until death.

Ranging in age from 80 to 97, these last living patients reside in the former leprosy colony on Molokai with support from the Hawaii Department of Health, which provides them with furnished homes, nursing staff and stipends for food and clothing.

The settlement鈥檚 non-patient inhabitants have made strides to reconnect with the patients, holding their hands when they speak as a gentle reminder that society is no longer afraid of them.

Enter the coronavirus pandemic.

The emergence of Covid-19 prompted state health regulators to impose aggressive restrictions to protect Kalaupapa鈥檚 former Hansen鈥檚 disease patients. Far stricter than pandemic rules enacted by the rest of the state, these policies have shaped a safe but lonely existence for the patients, who have not been permitted to see their families in the settlement since early March 2020.

An aerial view of an green peninsula jutting out into the water below tall sea cliffs
During the Covid-19 pandemic, state health regulators have viewed the entire Kalaupapa Peninsula as a care home and have accordingly implemented some of the strictest virus protection measures in the state. Courtesy: National Parks Service/2022

As the pandemic enters its third year, most of . A blanket no-visitor policy is still intact. Mandatory face masking and physical distancing rules remain in place 鈥 even in outdoor settings. Gathering is prohibited in groups larger than five.

Frequent telecommunications blackouts make life in Kalaupapa during the pandemic all the more isolating.

When despair set in following the non-Covid deaths of three former patients during the pandemic, one patient asked, 鈥淲hat is living?鈥

That鈥檚 according to Miki’ala Pescaia, who has befriended the patients and educates people about Kalaupapa and its sordid history as a ranger.

鈥淭hey were banished here to keep everybody else safe and now, a few years later, we鈥檙e flipping the script,鈥 Pescaia said. 鈥淎nd it’s been really hard for them.鈥

The patients fear the virus, but they sometimes beg for forbidden hugs.聽Some of those who suffer from memory loss due to old age occasionally confuse living in lockdown from the coronavirus with earlier experiences of being shunned by the world as a leprosy patient.

鈥淭his is the second time in their lives that they have been put in an isolation situation because of a rampant disease,鈥 said Richard Miller, a Protestant minister who moved to Kalaupapa almost two decades ago to work for the National Park Service.

鈥淭he irony, almost, is this time it was to protect them,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he first time it was to put them away from everyone and this time it was to keep the outside world and the problems of the pandemic away from them.鈥

鈥淏ut the psychological or emotional reaction had to have been similar,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淗ow could it not have been similar?鈥

‘We All Would Like It To Be Different’

A matter of debate: Was Kalaupapa the nation鈥檚 final county to get the coronavirus, or is it the only county that has evaded it?

The 10,700-acre peninsula, which is incorporated as and managed by the state health department, has so far reported a single positive Covid-19 infection, in December 2020.

But depending on who you talk to in the settlement, the person who tested positive was asymptomatic. And an antibody test later showed that the person probably never had Covid 鈥 a possibility the DOH said it did not have knowledge of but couldn鈥檛 rule out, either.

A pink and yellow sunset with palm trees in Kalaupapa peninsula.
鈥淭he sense of where you are is inescapable here,鈥 said Richard Miller, a protestant minister. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not easy to live here any time, but the people who choose to do so make a choice that they want to be here. It can be lonely here. It is a singular life to some degree.鈥 Courtesy: Miki鈥檃la Pescaia/2022

鈥淥ur one positive case was a false positive, but we were never able to undo that narrative,鈥 Pescaia said. 鈥淪o for us, we’re still Covid-free.鈥

But maintaining that status has taken a lot of sacrifice.

Before the pandemic, Kalaupapa had fewer than 100 inhabitants 鈥 mainly National Park Service employees and health workers 鈥 as well as up to 100 daily visitors on bus tours. Only about 40 people were left by early March 2020 when the pandemic prompted job furloughs and forced evictions for residents whose work there was deemed nonessential.

With travel to and from the remote peninsula restricted, the DOH initially introduced policies that allowed residents to freely recreate and exercise outdoors on their own, so long as they followed physical distancing and mask-wearing guidelines.

That strategy didn鈥檛 work, according to Ken Seamon, the DOH Kalaupapa administrator who helped develop pandemic policies for the settlement.

Kalaupapa residents include federal workers from the U.S. Postal Service and the National Park Service, as well as state employees of the health and transportation departments.

Federal employees were hearing from President Donald Trump that mask-wearing wasn’t required, while state employees were hearing from Gov. David Ige that masks were mandatory.

On the ground, these mixed messages created problems.

Kalaupapa’s only store, a tiny room sparsely stocked with perishable food and toiletries, has long been a gathering place. But the pandemic has limited residents to short and to-the-point shopping trips. Courtesy: Miki鈥檃la Pescaia/2022

So the health department decided to view the entire Kalaupapa peninsula as a care home, putting it under stricter Covid prevention rules than anywhere else in the state.

For months, Miller said the patients were so sequestered that it felt like they had vanished. The only people the patients could come in close contact with was the nursing staff.

鈥淲e are restricted in so many ways, which is difficult,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淥n the other hand, it feels like a very safe place. I don鈥檛 think anybody likes that you can鈥檛 have visitors or that we are all masked all the time and that we maintain all of the distancing requirements. But you just do it, whether you like it or not. We all would like it to be different, but so would the rest of the world.鈥

The patients have not been happy with these persistent restrictions on their freedoms, Seamon said, but they鈥檝e been understanding of them, as well as appreciative of the DOH to the point of expecting the agency to keep them from getting Covid.

Unquestionably, Kalaupapa鈥檚 resident patients are at high risk of death or severe illness from Covid.

They continue to suffer from disabilities related to Hansen鈥檚 disease, such as long-term foot ulcers stemming from nerve damage and loss of sensation, as well as chronic conditions associated with aging, such as diabetes and congestive heart failure.

When a patient requires medical attention in excess of the kind of care offered in a nursing home, they鈥檙e flown to Oahu for more advanced treatment. Four patients resided at the 14-bed Hale Mohalu Care Home in Honolulu on a long-term basis last year.

鈥淲e miss them when they go out because we don’t know when they鈥檒l be able to come back,鈥 said Sister Alicia Damien Lau, one of two Catholic nuns who reside in Kalaupapa.

Another Christmas Without Gatherings

After the delta wave but before the onset of omicron, the DOH had planned to allow patients to receive visitors in the settlement for the first time since the onset of the pandemic.

But omicron’s arrival and swift spread across Hawaii quashed hopes for a repeal of the no-visitor rule.

鈥淭his Christmas they really wanted to see their families,鈥 Lau said.

The Hawaii Department of Health pays for patient housing in the settlement. The department’s spending on Kalaupapa topped $4 million in fiscal year 2020 and $3.5 million in 2021. Courtesy: Edith Loke Alameida/2011

Sometimes, the patients can鈥檛 reach their families by phone, either.

Kalaupapa鈥檚 aging telecommunications infrastructure frequently malfunctions, severing the settlement鈥檚 connection to the outside world. Weeks-long telephone, internet and cable television outages are routine. During stretches of the pandemic when doctors were barred from traveling to Kalaupapa for in-person visits, these outages curtailed the ability of patients to use telehealth to access timely medical consultations.

One such outage prevented at least one patient from talking to his family this past Christmas.

In 2018, Kalaupapa acquired 10 public Wi-Fi hotspots that provide an hour of free service as part of the rollout of 100 hotspots in state parks and other public spaces. But many patients don鈥檛 have smart devices to make use of the hotspots.

The delivery of an iPad to the settlement in late 2021, however, marked a bright spot in a difficult pandemic period for the patient who received it.

鈥淭his patient was just absolutely excited about the iPad, calling family on the mainland and FaceTiming,鈥 according to Lau, who said the iPad was funded by grant money.

Lau visited Kalaupapa for the first time in 1965, at age 21, on the eve of her entry into the convent and before the repeal of the state鈥檚 forced isolation law for leprosy patients. She has intermittently volunteered in the settlement as a nun and as a nurse since the 1980s, moving to the settlement permanently in 2019.

She said the pandemic years have been quiet, sad and psychologically strenuous 鈥 above all for the patients, but also for the settlement鈥檚 other residents.

Lau hasn鈥檛 left Kalaupapa in nearly two years. She鈥檚 one of many residents who’ve opted out of travel to remain available for the needs of the patients.

In December, Lau made the difficult decision to stay put even upon the death of her sister.

鈥淢y goal is to be here until the last patient goes,鈥 said Lau, who is 77. 鈥淪o I鈥檝e got to keep myself well enough to do that.鈥

At one point during the pandemic, Pescaia could not leave her home in the settlement for 11 consecutive weeks. That鈥檚 because her husband, also a park ranger, would hike out of the settlement every two weeks to check on the couple鈥檚 children in topside Molokai, a term for all the rest of the island outside of Kalaupapa, where they were learning remotely in the family鈥檚 home. Every time he returned to the settlement, the couple was subject to a two-week quarantine even though Pescaia hadn鈥檛 left.

For Seamon, the pandemic has stripped Kalaupapa of some of its character.

鈥淚t’s shocked me into a very small, small, small understanding of what the patients went through when they got here,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not as much a home as it used to be for me; now it鈥檚 more so a job.”

‘The Magic Is Being Lost’

When the last patient dies and the DOH鈥檚 responsibility for providing patient care at Kalaupapa ends, there are .

Ownership of DOH property and infrastructure is expected to transfer to the Hawaii Department of Hawaiian Home Lands. It鈥檚 anticipated that the National Park Service will continue to lease the majority of the peninsula.

Ultimately the Hawaii Legislature will have the most say in shaping Kalaupapa’s post-pandemic, post-patient existence. Quarterly meetings gather stakeholders from the DOH, National Park Service, Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, Maui County and the U.S. Department of Interior’s Office of Native Hawaiian Relations and other relevant agencies to coordinate emergency services in Kalaupapa, which has no police, firefighters or hospital, and to discuss the settlement’s uncertain future.

At first, some patients viewed the state鈥檚 pandemic restrictions as a challenge to the liberties they waited so long to have restored, according to Pescaia. Courtesy: Miki鈥檃la Pescaia/2022

“Kalaupapa is never going to be the same,鈥 Pescaia said. 鈥淭here’s so much that has changed in the dynamics of the community, and rebuilding the new Kalaupapa post-pandemic is going to look way different. It’ll never, ever, be the way it was before.鈥

One reason for that, according to Pescaia, is that rebuilding a post-pandemic Kalaupapa will likely bring a sudden influx of new staff who will descend on the remote enclave in stark contrast to the way new residents have always slowly trickled in.

New residents are typically invited to join card games and volleyball games. They go fishing with the uncles. They talk story on the pier. They become acquainted with the spirit of the place through experiential learning.

They also learn about Kalaupapa鈥檚 unique set of rules put in place to protect patient mental health.

The patients were once subject to beatings for not wearing shoes. That鈥檚 because Hansen鈥檚 disease patients often suffer from nerve damage and loss of sensation. With bare feet, a cut on the foot could easily go undetected and grow infected. So the modern-day settlement has a rule: No bare feet.

Children under the age of 16 are prohibited from entering the settlement since patients were discouraged from having children. Parents had their newborn babies taken away from them聽out of fear that their disease would be passed on to their children.

The only time a child can enter Kalaupapa is at the request of a patient. But there are rules governing these visits to keep the child out of sight of the settlement where patients freely roam.

Absorbing new inhabitants into Kalaupapa incrementally and with great care is critical, Pescaia said, because this sort of initiation process helps protect the settlement from outside influence.

Although pandemic restrictions have made the peninsula practically impervious to the rest of world, Pescaia said the prolonged inability to gather has dampened Kalaupapa鈥檚 community spirit in irreparable ways.

鈥淎ll of the magic is being lost now,鈥 she said.

Civil Beat鈥檚 coverage of Maui County is supported in part by a grant from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation.

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