Testimonials from our customers
 
 
Rated the 6th best island to visit for natural habitat and cultural experience by National Geographic Traveler (Nov/Dec 07), Moloka’i is home to the Kalaupapa Peninsula, a National Historical Park.  
This peninsula is isolated and fairly inaccessible. To the south, it is cut off from the rest of Moloka`i by a sheer pali, or cliff about 2,000 feet high. The ocean surrounds the east, north and west sides. 
Kalaupapa, once a community in isolation, now serves as a place for education and contemplation. It is a place where many families in Hawai`i reconnect with a grandparent or great-grandparent once considered "lost." It is a place where past suffering has given way to personal pride about accomplishments in the face of adversity.
It is a place where each of us can reconsider our emotional and physical responses to people with disfiguring disabilities or illnesses. It is a place where the land has the power to heal—because of its human history, natural history, and stunning physical beauty.
 

  
Kalaupapa & Father Damien Tour Moloka’i Hawaii
Friday, November 2, 2007