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Anwei Skinsnes Law

The University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Library presents a lecture by award-winning UH Press author Anwei Skinsnes Law on “New Perspectives on the History of Kalaupapa” in Hamilton Library Room 301 on Thursday, November 7, 3:30 p.m.

Law, a UH graduate, has been researching the history of Kalaupapa for more than 40 years. She has conducted oral history interviews with many Kalaupapa residents and family members and produced books and documentaries on various aspects of the history. Her most recent book, Kalaupapa: A Collective Memory published by UH Press, was named the winner of the 2013 Samuel M. Kamakau Award as Book of the Year by the Hawaiʻi Book Publishers Association.

View the historical exhibit, A Source of Light, Constant and Never-Fading, developed by Ka ʻohana O Kalaupapa, on the 1st floor of Hamilton Library following the lecture.

More on Kalaupapa

Between 1866 and 1969, an estimated 8,000 people were taken from their families and places of birth, and sent to Kalaupapa because of Hawaiʻi’s Hansen’s disease or leprosy isolation policies. About 5,200 of these individuals were sent to Kalaupapa prior to the annexation of Hawaiʻi by the United States and approximately 97 percent of them were Native Hawaiian.

Members of the royal family were deeply moved by the situation facing so many of their “beloved people” who were diagnosed with leprosy. They visited Kalaupapa, read petitions, wrote letters, mourned friends who had been taken from their midst and did what they could to make life better for those impacted by the disease. Leprosy was a very real presence in their lives.

A UH Mānoa news release

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