Welcome to the MOSL Book Challenge


Showing posts with label Leprosy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leprosy. Show all posts

Saturday, August 30, 2014

The Island by Victoria Hislop

Alexis is an archeologist with a good job in a British museum and a relationship that, three years in, seems to be withering. Their Greek Island holiday has exposed deep fault lines in a seemingly perfect match. Toward the end of the vacation, Alexis decides to go alone to visit the Greek village where her Mother grew up. Her Mother has always been secretive about her past, and Alexis wants to see where she lived, and understand how she came to be in England. Her Mother gives Alexis a letter for her friend Fotini, who tells Alexis the story of her grandmother Anna, and great-aunt Maria.

Eleni, (Alexis’s great-grandmother) lives in Plaka, on the island of Crete with her husband and two daughters, Anna and Maria. When she is diagnosed with leprosy, she is exiled to the island of Spinalonga, just across the water from Plaka. Spinalonga was one of the last active leper colonies in Europe, being used for that purpose from 1903-1957.

Eleni was exiled to Spinalonga, entering through the lepers' entrance, a tunnel known as ‘Dante’s Gate’, so named because the patients did not know what was going to happen to them once they arrived. However, once on the island they received food, water, medical attention and social security payments. Her daughters were left behind with their father.

Fotini takes Alexis to visit Spinalonga, and tells her all about her Mother’s family, as well as the history of Greece, Crete, Plaka and Spinalonga.

This book is overly long, very detailed, and rather shallow in some ways, but is a fascinating glimpse into leprosy and the lives of people inflicted with it.



482 pages

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Kalaupapa and the Legacy of Father Damien

While in Honolulu for a conference, Scott and I decided to take a little extra time and see some of the sights.One of the most interesting and breathtaking was our stop at Kalaupapa on the island of Moloka'i. Here we learned a little bit about the history of leprosy in Hawaii. Leprosy, along with epidemics including smallpox, cholera, influenza and whooping cough, brought a population change in Hawaii from about 300,000 in 1778 to only 31,000 in 1896. People with leprosy were taken from their homes to Moloka'i in hopes that the spread of the disease could be contained. This book, written by Anwei V. Skinsnes and Richard A. Wisniewski, provides a short history of the disease, its effect on the people, and the hope brought to the Kalaupapa and Kalawao settlements by Father Damien, Mother Marianne Cope, the Sisters of St. Francis, and Brother Joseph Dutton. 72 p.