Resurrection of the Lord Church
Two Josephs of Molokai
Before
his ordination, Father Damien's name was Joseph.
Brother Dutton took the name Joseph upon his confirmation into the Catholic
Church.
Destiny would bring them together on the Kalaupapa peninsula in 1886.
![]() Brother Joseph Dutton |
![]() This portrait, created by Jimmy Tablante, hangs in the front of the worship area of Resurrecion of the Lord |
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Saint Damien of Molokai His
cassock was worn and faded, his hair tumbled like a school-boys,
his hands stained and hardened by toil; but the glow of health was in
his face, the buoyancy of youth in his manner; while his ringing laugh,
his ready sympathy, and his inspiring magnetism told of one who in any
sphere might do a noble work, and who in that which he has chosen is
doing the noblest of all works. This was Father Damien. No person is as central to the history of Kalawao and Kalaupapa as Joseph De Veuster, or, as he is best known to the world, Father Damien. He arrived during the early days of Kalawaos history, when people with Hansens disease were being rounded up throughout the Hawaiian Islands and shipped to the isolated settlement on Moloka`i. Joseph De Veuster was born in Tremeloo, Belgium, in 1840. Like his older brother Pamphile, Joseph became a priest in the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts. Pamphile was to serve as a missionary in the far distant Sandwich Islands, but when it came time for him to depart he was too ill to go. His brother Joseph went in his place. He arrived in Honolulu on March 19, 1864. There he was ordained in the Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace on May 31 and took the name of Damien. His first calling was on the big island of Hawai`i, where he spent eight years. He often traveled great distances to minister to the people of his districts of Puna, followed by Kohala and Hamakua. In 1873 he learned of the need for priests to serve the 700 Hansens disease victims confined on the island of Moloka`i. He and three other priests volunteered to go in succession. Damien was the first, and soon he was on a boat carrying cattle and 50 patients bound for Kalawao. Damien was the most famous but not the first caregiver or religious worker to arrive at Kalawao. He followed Congregational ministers, Catholic priests, Mormon elders, and family and friends of patients who went voluntarily to Kalawao to help. Slowly, Kalawao became a place to live rather than a place to die, for Father Damien offered hope. He spoke the Hawaiian language. Assisted by patients, he built houses, constructed a water system, and planted trees. He also organized schools, bands, and choirs. He provided medical care for the living and buried the dead. He expanded St. Philomena Catholic Church. Not a retiring personality, Damien did not hesitate to badger the Hawaiian government and his church for more resources. These efforts attracted worldwide attention, resulting in a heightened awareness of the disease and the plight of its victims. During Father Damiens years at Kalawao, others came to help. A number of priests spent varying lengths of time. In 1886 Joseph Dutton arrived, followed in 1888 by Mother Marianne Cope and two of her sisters from the Order of St. Francis. They, along with four Brothers of the Sacred Heart who arrived in 1895, carried Damiens work into the next century. Father Damien had lived in Kalawao 12 years when it was confirmed that he had contracted Hansens disease. Although the disease is not highly contagious, Damien had not been careful about hygiene. Over the years he had done nothing to separate himself from his people. He dipped his fingers in the poi bowl shared with other patients. He shared his pipe. And he did not always wash his hands after bandaging open sores. Damien was 49 years old when he died April 15, 1889, at Kalawao with Mother Marianne at his bedside. Shortly before his death, he wrote his brother Pamphile, I am gently going to my grave. It is the will of God, and I thank Him very much for letting me die of the same disease and in the same way as my lepers. I am very satisfied and very happy. He was buried in the cemetery next to his church, St. Philomena. The people of Kalawao had lost their strongest voice. Damiens death was widely noted throughout Hawai`i and in Europe. As the years passed, his life of devotion served to inspire thousands. Because Kalaupapa remained an isolation settlement and the world could not come to his church and grave, Damiens remains were exhumed in 1936 and reburied at Louvain, Belgium. In 1995 a relic composed of the remains of his right hand was returned to his original grave at Kalawao, to the great joy of Kalaupapa and the rest of Hawai`i. Damiens life of service to the sick and outcast continues to serve as an inspiration. From Kalaupapa National Historical Park website |
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Brother Joseph Dutton of Molokai Ira Dutton, known to the world as Brother Dutton, was born in Stowe, Vermont on April 27, 1843 and in 1847 his family moved to Janesville, Wisconsin where he spent his youth. When the Civil War broke out he joined the Northern Army and served with distinction in the Quartmaster Corp rising to the rank of Captain. He was engaged in many battles. Following the war he volunteered to find the dead that were scattered on the battlefields and bring them to a common burial site, which eventually became the National Cemetery.Dutton entered into an unstable marriage that eventually ended in divorce. He turned to alcohol and drank heavily for the next few years. He was very patriotic and realizing that he was heading into oblivion, he took a vow to never touch a drop of whiskey again and he kept that vow for the remainder of his life. He sought to seek atonement for his transgressions and became a convert to the Catholic faith, taking the name Joseph at Baptism-not realizing that eventually he would meet another Jospeh who would change the course of his life. Dutton entered the Trappist Monastery in Kentucky but after two and a half years of strict discipline, fast and silence, he realized that this was not his true vocation and he left the monastery with the blessing of the Abbot.Learning about the plight of Father Damien, he knew that he was called to serve this heroic man. He gave away all of his possessions, went on a steamer to Hawaii and arrived at Kalawao in July 1886 offering himself to Father Damien without any request for any recompense. For almost two years he worked side by side with Damien, helping with his projects of building and caring for these isolated outcasts. After Damien's death he stayed on Molokai for the rest of his life, spending almost 42 more years caring for the young boys and men. He never contracted leprosy and became widely known by many distinguished figuers in the United States and foreign countries, including President Wilson and President Theodore Roosevelt who sent the Pacific Fleet to pass Molokai and dip their colors in salute to this heroic patriot. Brother Dutton died on March 26, 1931 and is buried in the grave next to Damien at St. Philomena Church, Kalawao. |
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