
Below the great north cliffs lies a place of profound and solemn memory: the isolated Kalaupapa Peninsula. From 1866, under Kingdom law, people diagnosed with Hansen's disease were exiled there, cut off by the sea and the cliffs; over the following century more than eight thousand, most of them Native Hawaiians, were taken from their families and sent to Kalaupapa. In 1873 a Belgian priest, Father Damien, came to live among them and care for them, and he remained until the disease claimed his own life in 1889; Mother Marianne Cope carried the work on. Both were later canonized. Forced isolation ended in 1969, and a few residents chose to stay in the only home they had known. Today Kalaupapa is a national historical park and a living memorial — a story held with reverence, never for sale.
It is also, by long tradition, the birthplace of hula. At Kaʻana, in the island's west, Hawaiians hold that the goddess Laka first danced and first taught the sacred art, and from Molokaʻi hula spread to the rest of the archipelago. Each year practitioners return to honor that origin, and the island guards the tradition as something living and sacred rather than a show. To dance, to chant, to carry the old stories forward — on Molokaʻi these are not relics but daily inheritance, named here with respect.
Why People Visit Molokaʻi
Molokaʻi offers the rarest thing in Hawaiʻi: an island that is still genuinely itself. It pairs deep living culture — hula's birthplace, the fishponds, the homestead lands — with dramatic, near-empty coast and a pace the rest of the islands lost long ago. Quiet, rural, and proud, it is made for travelers who want the real Hawaiʻi and are willing to meet it on its own terms.