Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 26, Number 6, 1 Iune 2009 — Kalaupapa group to witness Damien's sainthood [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
Kalaupapa group to witness Damien's sainthood
By Lisa Asato Public lnfurmatiūn Specialist Nine former Hansen's disease patients and their kōkua, or helpers, are planning to attend the canonization of Father Damien in Rome and are seeking the public's help to do so. To help them witness the Oct. 1 1 ceremony in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City, a dinner will be held Iuly 18 at the Sheraton Waikīkī - complete with music and hula by former patients and doctors, silent and live auctions, and presentations
about Damien and the Kalaupapa leprosy settlement by Drs. Emmett Aluli and Ben Young. Makia Malo, who was 12 when he was sent to Kalaupapa in 1947, said the trip will allow him to "show admiration and aloha" for Damien on behalf of all those who eame before him, including friends and family who have passed on. "I'm representing my kid brother (Earl). He's not able to go. He's buried there (in Kalaupapa)," said Malo,
74, who will travel with the group to Damien's hometown before arriving in
Kome. "1 m just so lucky to be privileged enough to be part of this group." For a little more than a eentury, from 1866
to 1969, about 8,000 leprosy patients were forced to live on the Moloka'i settlement. Native Hawaiians and Chinese were especially susceptible to the disease, and an esti-
mated 90 percent of the 8,000 were Native Hawaiian. The disease was treatable by the late 1940s. Five of the nine former patients who will travel to Rome are Native Hawaiian, but all represent a dying history. That's because as their population ages, only about 15 former patients are still alive. "They're the last of it," said sister Alieia Damien Lau, who will attend the canonization. "They've experienced the same hurt and suf-
fering that the very first one had felt and suffered." Lau, of the Diocese of Honolulu, the fundraiser's main sponsor, called the trip a "onee in a lifetirne event." She said Damien helped heal the spiritual wounds and anger of those who were taken from their families and sent to Kalaupapa against their will, and today's survivors will represent in Rome all who were sent there. Barbara Marks spent 62 years at Kalaupapa, where she cared for an aunt who had cared for her as a girl in Kaimukī, before either of them was stricken with the disease. "I heard so mueh of Father Damien when I was in school - not knowing I was going to heeome a patient," said Marks. "I'm looking forward to this trip to Rome . . . to pay respects and to see where (Damien) was born and to know the history of his life then." Born Ioseph De Veuster in Tremeloo, Belgium, in 1840, Damien served the leprosy patients of the Moloka'i settlement for 26 years from 1873 until he died of the disease in 1899. In a major step toward canonization, Damien was beatified by Pope lohn Paul II in See HAMIEN on page II
Father ūamien Legacy Dinner 5p.m. Saturday, July 18 Sheraton Waikīkī Tickets, whieh are tax deductible, are $200 eaeh; corporate tables are $2,000 or $5,000. For information, tickets or to be an event sponsor, contact Geri Kaleponi at 349-9900 or gjk@ hawaii.edu, or eall Paul Cunneyat 551-6500.
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Eight of the nine Kalaupapa residents planning to travel to Rome for Damien's eanonization gathered in Honolulu May 3 to announee plans for a fundraising dinner. Seated from left are Meli Watanuki, Winnie Harada, Barbara Marks and Makia Malo. Standing are John Arruda, Gloria Marks, and lvy and Clarence "Boogie" Kahilihiwa. - Photo: Courtesy of Dee-Ann Carpenter
PAMIEN
Cūntinued fram page 07 1995. This time around, Damien will be canonized by Pope Benedict XVI. The 500-seat Father Damien Legacy Dinner will also support several other projects: a film documentary by the Diocese of Honolulu commemorating the eanonization and events surrounding it, transportation of a relic of Damien's to San Francisco and the Neighbor Islands, and a Nov. 1 civic/ecumenical event at 'Iolani Palaee following enshrinement of the relic in Honolulu's Cathedral of Our Lady of Peaee, where Damien was ordained a priest. Funds will also go toward the Richard Marks Endowment for Native Hawaiians and other medical students in need, whieh perpetuates a decades-long relationship between the University of Hawai'i School of Medicine and Kalaupapa. Marks, a former patient, sheriff and historian of Kalaupapa who died in 2008, was
Barbara Marks' brother-in-law. 'Ahahui o Nā Kauka, the Association of Native Hawaiian Physicians, is also a sponsor of the event. Drs. Dee-Ann Carpenter and Kalani Brady of the UH Medical School's Native Hawaiian Heahh Department said organizers have faith that the community will support this cause even during tough
eeonomie times because many families in Hawai'i have relatives who were sent to Kalaupapa. What's more, said Brady, Kalaupapa's resident doctor, Damien's elevation to sainthood has universal ramifications. "When Damien is canonized, he is not a saint for Hawai'i," Brady said. "He is a saint for the world." ■
Dr. Dee-Ann Carpenter, Sister Alieia ūamien Lau, Geri Kaleponi and Dr. Kalani Brady are helping to organize a fundraiser dinner primarily to defray travel costs for nine former Kalaupapa patients to fly to Rome to witness Father Damien's elevation to sainthood,- Photo: Lisa Asato