Hawaii
Hawaii Has A National Park The Public Can No Longer Tour
Kalaupapa is one of Hawaii’s most important historical sites and a National Historical Park, yet there is now no public way to tour it. The public can still see the peninsula from the Palaau overlook, and residents may still sponsor private guests, but the scheduled tours that took visitors into the settlement have ceased.
Last week we wrote about the death of Aunty Meli Watanuki and what it could mean for Kalaupapa. Since then, the tour company she created has announced that scheduled tours ended on June 12 and will not continue. Guests with reservations are receiving refunds, and a statement from Aunty Meli’s family says she did not intend the tours to continue after her death.
That leaves Hawaii in a place few visitors probably expected. The more we looked into what happens next, the more one question kept coming back: how did a place this significant end up here?
We hiked down the Pali in 2009 carrying gifts of fresh fruit from Kauai, to visit a priest we had not yet met. At the bottom of the trail, there was Father Felix. He’d driven out to meet us, and it was there that we spent time talking (our lead photo). We talked about Kalaupapa and his role there, and about the years he had served on Kauai even before Kalaupapa. What we remember is not a tour or a site, but the hike laden with gifts of love for a man who came out to greet two strangers from a familiar place, at the end of a long descent.
Kalaupapa has always been presented through the lives of the people who carried it, including Father Felix. Father Damien, Mother Marianne Cope, Richard Marks, and Aunty Meli all each kept part of its story alive. Long after patients stopped arriving there, those lives remained the link between Kalaupapa, the rest of Hawaii, and the world.
The tours have stopped.
The end of tours came from the death of Aunty Meli and a decision by her family to honor what they say was her intent. Kalaupapa Saints Tours says its scheduled tours will no longer operate and that paid guests are being refunded.
That decision is one deserving of respect. Aunty Meli created the tour to share the history and honor the people who lived it. The harder question is what happens now that the only public tour has stopped.
Many visitors assume the National Park Service runs tours to Kalaupapa, but it does not. The Hawaii Department of Health issues permits, yet the National Park Service manages the historical park. Public access has always depended on patient-resident participation. It is an arrangement unlike anything else within the National Park Service system.
The number nobody seems to be able to answer.
Depending on the source and how it’s being counted, somewhere between two and seven former Hansen’s disease patients remain connected to Kalaupapa. Some reports count former patients still living at the settlement, while others appear to count people on the state registry or those otherwise connected to the community.
For this place whose very access rules still are dependent on those residents, no agency appears to publicly maintain or disclose a definitive figure. The point is that the system still rests on a population so small that even the count seems to come back differently depending on who’s doing the calculation.
That reality has been coming for years. When we first wrote about Kalaupapa more nearly two decades ago, there were far more surviving patients than there are today. Every subsequent article, reader memory, and official update pointed in this same direction. The generation that lived and experienced Kalaupapa firsthand was getting smaller.
Access to Kalaupapa was always fragile.
Kalaupapa’s public access model has long depended on people already in their last years. A patient-resident had to be part of every tour authorization, the Department of Health had to issue each entry permit, and the National Park Service has never opened the park to visitors on its own, in this unique relationship between them and the Hawaii DOH.
That very structure may have reflected Kalaupapa’s history and the privacy of those who lived there. It also meant that the public’s ability to tour this unique and emotional national park rested on a foundation everyone knew would soon disappear. The fact that tours have now ended shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone who has followed Kalaupapa closely.
What is surprising is how little has been said publicly about what happens next. The disease that led to Kalaupapa’s isolation to begin with is not an issue; the patient population is nearly gone, and the Department of Health’s role still traces back to that old history. The National Park Service says it is exploring alternatives, but no public plan, timeline, or future access model has been presented yet.
An iconic national park the public cannot tour.
BOH editor Rob kept coming back to the same question as we discussed this article. How can a national park this iconic, spiritual, and important be one the public can no longer tour? That question does not disrespect Aunty Meli, her family, or the remaining residents. Their wishes and privacy come first.
But the question still has to be asked. Kalaupapa is public land and one of the state’s most sacred places. It was preserved so that its story would not disappear, yet the public now has no way to access and appreciate this special place. The Palaau overlook on Molokai remains open, and residents may still sponsor private guests, but that is not the same as public access to the settlement.
This is not about turning Kalaupapa into just another attraction. It should never be treated that way. It is about whether a national historical park can remain meaningful to the public when virtually no one can reach the place where the history happened.
The question that can no longer wait.
Kalaupapa has reached the point people connected to it have talked about for years. We talked about it with Father Felix in 2009. The patient generation is nearly gone, and the public access system built around that generation has stopped functioning.
The silence surrounding what comes next deserves scrutiny. No one has publicly explained who should decide the future of Kalaupapa, how public access might work going forward, or what role the Department of Health should have when the patient era ends imminently. No one has said whether the National Park Service is prepared to take on a different kind of responsibility there in this unique setting.
We do not think there’s an easy answer. Kalaupapa is sacred, painful, beautiful, and unlike any other place in Hawaii. But a national park the public can no longer visit cannot be its final plan. If there is a plan, the public has not seen it and deserves to. If there is no plan, that is the real story now.
Have you been to Kalaupapa, or hoped to, and what do you think should happen to it now? Tell us who you think should decide the future of a national park almost no one can reach.
Photo Credits: © Beat of Hawaii at Kalaupapa. Father Felix drove out to meet us at the bottom of the Pali trail in 2009.
We’re Jeff and Rob, and we’ve spent nearly 20 years covering Hawaii from Kauai. The changes that shape Hawaii often happen quietly, long before most visitors notice them. We follow them closely and tell you what they mean for your trip. Join us.
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$5 deal for National Fried Chicken Day
HONOLULU (KHON2) — Fried chicken fans have a reason to celebrate today as Popeyes Hawaii marks National Fried Chicken Day with a special one-day-only offer.
On Monday, July 6, participating Popeyes locations across Hawaii are offering five pieces of Signature Chicken for just $5, while supplies last. The deal includes a mix of legs and thighs and is limited to one order per customer and one per vehicle, with no substitutions.
Popeyes says the promotion is a fun way for customers to enjoy its signature crispy, Louisiana-style fried chicken at a value price while celebrating the national food holiday.
The offer is available today only at participating Popeyes Hawaii restaurants including Aiea, Waipahu (Waikele), Kunia, Kapolei, Kailua, Kaneohe, and Pāhoa (Big Island). The offer is limited to one per vehicle in the drive-thru and one order per customer for dine-in, while supplies last.
For more information and participating locations, visit popeyeshawaii.com.
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PHOTOS: 4 ways locals celebrated July 4 this year
HONOLULU (KHON2) — Various celebrations — beyond the usual fireworks and barbecues — marked the U.S.’s 250th anniversary on Independence Day.
From regatta to an annual Japanese tradition on Oʻahu, here’s four other events that took place on this July 4.
84th Regatta
To start off the morning, the 84th Walter J. Macfarlane Memorial Canoe Regatta was held at Waikiki Beach.
“Today there’s a swell. It’s not huge, but it’s not flat, so I mean it’s like a perfect requirement day, there’s excitement, there’s enough activity to keep it, first the variable, and keep everybody on their toes, and it makes for close races,” said Jim Foti with the Lanikai Canoe Club.
Canoe paddlers of all ages hit the water for a full day of racing.
“We have had some really fun races this morning,” said Siana Austin Hunt, president of the Oahu Hawaiian Canoe Racing Association. “Our kids did really well. We also had some great finishes with a lot of crews finishing on the same wave.”
The regatta is a tradition that is recognized as the longest-running outrigger canoe races in the world.
America250
Kapiolani Park served as the backdrop for America’s once-in-a-lifetime celebration commemorating 250 years. The free event brought families together for food, music, performances and special recognition for our military and veterans.
“There’s a lot of people that’s been going around the different booths and the different venues and enjoying themselves, listening to the music every hour on the hour, and at the same time they’re looking at some of the auditory, tasting the various different types of food, and just enjoying yourself and relaxing,” said Lynn Mariano, commissioner of Hawaii America250 Commission.
La Hoʻihoʻi Ea
While many celebrated Independence Day, others gathered at Iolani Palace to reflect on a different perspective of Hawaiʻi’s history into statehood.
The event highlighted La Hoʻihoʻi Ea, or Sovereignty Restoration Day, which commemorates the history of the Hawaiian Kingdom and encouraged a discussion about Hawaiian sovereignty and self-determination.
“We’re here to reclaim our place to retell our stories and to resound the message of Hawaiian sovereignty restoration,” said Imai Winchester, lead organizer for La Hoʻihoʻi Ea.
The free event included cultural performances, music, educational exhibits, speakers and family activities. It was the first of a month-long series of events that will lead up to a celebration on July 26 at Thomas Square.
Organizers said it’s an opportunity to learn, reflect and celebrate Hawaiian identity.
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An annual Japanese tradition fell on the 4th of July this year. The popular Mōʻiliʻili Summer Fest drew in thousands to the Old Varsity Theater parking lot on University Avenue.


Now in its 13th year, the event prides itself on having one of Honolulu’s largest bon dances — and no obon festival is complete without taiko drums and andagi.
One of the booths was prepared to sell thousands of the deep-fried treat, with proceeds supporting Hawaii’s young athletes.
The festival is held every first Saturday of July.
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