George W’s Epiphany
January 6, 2010 12:42 pm > MAUI TODAY, > Maui Yesterdays, > mEnvironment George W’s Epiphany![]() |
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HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — Mai Lepela: Leprosy
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY — I save tumas: WiseJanuary 6, 2009: President Bush II Names New Pacific National Monuments. President George W. Bush designates vast tracts of American-controlled Pacific Ocean islands, reefs, surface waters and sea floor as marine national monuments, limiting fishing, mining, oil exploration and other commercial activity. At least he did one thing right in 8 years. More >

January 6, 1866: The first lepers are forced to move to Molokai.
The history of the Molokai Leper Colony at Kalaupapa causes a confusing and sometimes contradictory understanding of the peninsula. Today, there are people with Hansen’s Disease (leprosy) still living in the colony, even though the disease is curable with antibiotics. The state of Hawaii has pledged to keep the colony open as long as the residents wish to stay, or until the last of them dies.
Such beneficence is a recent phenomenon. The most recent book covering this topic, The Colony, by John Tayman, was met with effusive critical success in book reviews and newspapers across the country, but was not well received in Hawaii. One possible reason: He lays bare the cruel nature of the colony, which was not nescessarily inspired by sadism, as this passage suggests:
“Doctors tried training patients to blink on schedule, using a timer or some other device. The technique worked in some cases, but only if the patient was physically able. Leprosy bacilli also attack the nerve controlling eyelid muscles, creating a condition known as lagophthalmos, in which the person is unable to close the eyelids. In such cases surgeons rigged a thread of muscle from the jaw to the lid, which caused the person to blink as he chewed – doctors then handed them a pack of gum.”
Still, it is true that if a person in Hawaii had leprosy, or was suspected of having leprosy, they were forced to the island of Molokai, taken there in restraints if necessary. Once banished to Kalaupapa, (for decades doctors just didn’t know who to treat it, or what the causes were), medical experiments were routinely performed on patients without their knowledge or consent. In many cases, patients were not told about surgeries they would undergo, nor informed that most were experimental procedures.
By the way, these forced experiments were especially common during Father Damien’s and Mother Marianne Cope’s time. Christianity, it seems, was as misguided as science in this case. Father Damien himself eventually contracted and died of Hansen’s Disease in 1889.
EVENTS ON THIS DAY
- 1493: The first mass in the “New World” is celebrated in Haiti
- 1496: The Moorish fortress of Alhambra, near Grenada, surrenders to the Christians
- 1540: King Henry VIII of England marries his 4th wife, Anne of Cleves
- 1639: Virginia is first colony to order surplus crops (tobacco) destroyed
- 1759: George Washington & Martha Dandridge Custis are married
- 1838: The first public demonstration of the telegraph is given by Samuel F. B. Morse
- 1907: Maria Montessori founds the first Montessori school in Rome
- 1912: New Mexico becomes the 47th state of the Union
- 1914: The stock brokerage firm of Merrill Lynch is founded
- 1927: U.S. Marines are sent to occupy Nicaragua
- 1950: Britain formally recognizes the Communist government of mainland China
- 1952: The daily comic “Peanuts,” by Charles Schulz, first appears in U.S. newspapers
- 1957: Elvis Presley makes his seventh and final appearance on CBS-TV’s “Ed Sullivan Show”
- 1958: Gibson patents the Flying V Guitar
- 1968: Dr N. E. Shumway performs the first U.S. adult cardiac transplant operation
- 2001: The U.S. Congress formally certifies George W. Bush as the winner of the close and bitterly contested 2000 presidential election
- 2005: Former Ku Klux Klan leader Edgar Ray Killen was arrested 41 years after he murdered 3 civil rights workers in Mississippi. (He is serving 60 years.)
BORN ON THIS DAY
- 1367: Richard II, king of England
- 1412: Joan of Arc, martyr
- 1878: Carl Sandburg, poet/biographer
- 1880: Tom Mix, silent screen cowboy actor
- 1882: Samuel Rayburn, speaker of the House
- 1883: Khalil Gibran, mystic poet
- 1913: Loretta Young, actress
- 1914: Danny Thomas, comedian
- 1915: Alan Watts, writer
- 1920: Reverand Sun Myung Moon, evangelist
- 1921: Lou Harris, pollster
- 1924: Earl Scruggs, bluegrass musician
- 1925: John Z DeLorean, auto maker
- 1929: Wilbert Harrison, R & B singer
- 1931: E .L. Doctorow, novelist
- 1941: Sandy Denny, rock vocalist
- 1944: Bonnie Franklin, actress
- 1953: Malcolm Young, guitarist
- 1954: Anthony Minghella, film director
- 1956: Rowan Atkinson, comedian/actor
- 1957: Nancy Lopez Knight, pro golfer
- 1959: Kathy Sledge, vocalist
- 1960: Nigella Lawson, TV chef
- 1960: Howie Long, NFL player, sportscaster
- 1964: Mark O’Toole, bassist/drummer
- 1967: Peter Loran, rock vocalist
- 1968: John Singleton, film director
DIED ON THIS DAY
- 1985: Robert H W Welch Jr US founder/leader John Birch Society, dies at 85
- 1993: John B “Dizzy” Gillespe blues trumpeter, dies of cancer at 75
- 1993: Rudolph Nureyev Russian ballet dancer (Kirov), dies of AIDS at 54
- 1994: Morty the Moose (Northern Exposure), dies at 6
- 1994: Tip O’Neill speaker of the house, dies of cancer
- 1994: Virginia Kelley Clinton Mother of President Clinton, dies at 70
- 1996: Duane Hanson sculptor, dies at 60
- 1996: John Phillipps Kenyon historian/teacher, dies at 68
- 1996: Robert Russell “Chubby” Wise musician, dies at 80
- 1997: Litz Pisk movement teacher, dies at 87
- 1997: Vince Williams actor (Hamp-Guiding Light), dies of cancer at 39
- 2006: Lou Rawls, American singer (b. 1933)
- 2006: Hugh Thompson, Jr., decorated Vietnam War helicopter pilot (b. 1943)
- 2009: Ron Asheton, The Stooges guitarist (b. 1948)

