Mark Lambert currently has a full-time postdoctoral appointment as a teaching fellow at the University of Chicago in both the Divinity School and the College where I teach such courses as Religion, Medicine, and the Experience of Illness, Religion and AIDS and Indigenous Religions, Health and Healing.


On 3 January, 1865, the Kingdom of Hawaii, then a sovereign state, enacted ā€œAn Act to Prevent the Spread of Leprosy.ā€ Any person suspected of having the ancient disease ā€“ which is mentioned as far back as the Bible ā€“ would be inspected and, if deemed incurable, permanently exiled to a peninsula on the island of Molokai.

More than 8,000 people with leprosy fell victim to this policy of permanent segregation over the next century. Native Hawaiians renamed leprosy ā€œma’i ho’oka’awale ā€˜ohanaā€: the sickness that separates family. Surrounded by steep cliffs and treacherous ocean, the peninsula served as a natural prison and soon gathered a reputation as a de facto death sentence.

But in the Catholic Church, 10 May commemorates the day one man moved to Molokai willingly: Father Damien. Born Jozef De Veuster in Belgium, he came to Hawaii as a young Catholic missionary and spent the last 16 years of his life voluntarily living in the leprosy colony, before contracting the disease himself and dying in 1889.

Canonised as a saint in 2009, Father Damien was designated the patron saint of people with leprosy, or Hansenā€™s disease.

My research focusses on how Christian theology views socially stigmatised diseases, such as leprosy. Since the HIV/AIDS epidemic began in the 1980s, Damien has also become linked with the virus and inspired many Catholic groups that care for patients. His legacy illustrates the churchā€™s complicated, often harmful, views on HIV/AIDS ā€“ but has also helped people see those who suffer from stigmatised diseases with more agency and dignity.

Joining the community

Damien landed at Molokai on 10 May 1873. In a now-famous letter to his brother, he wrote that he would make himself ā€œa leper with lepersā€ to ā€œgain all to Christ”.

For over 2,000 years, ‘care’ for people with leprosy has often been reduced to segregation. This was the case in Hawaii, where the board of health offered bounties to those who turned in suspected patients. The widespread belief that leprosy was an advanced stage of syphilis added an air of moral condemnation to the policy.

According to accounts such as Kaluapapa: A Collective Memory, which documents residentsā€™ experiences in the colony, Damien employed his carpentry skills to build two chapels, new shelters for the residents and a multitude of coffins. He provided rudimentary medical care, secured a fresh water supply and established an orphanage. At a time when fear of being near people with leprosy was the norm, the priest also ate with residents from the same pot and shared his pipe with them.

By the beginning of 1885 Damien began to show signs of having contracted leprosy and in 1886 the priest formally became known as Admission #2886 to the settlements. Three years later, he succumbed to the disease.

Patron saint

Damienā€™s ministry garnered an international audience, elevating him to something of a celebrity, and his death prompted an immediate response. The future king of England, Edward VII, proposed to erect a monument to Damien on Molokai, to establish a ward devoted to leprosy in a London medical institution and to fund research on leprosy in India. Damienā€™s example inspired the creation of several other organisations devoted to the study and treatment of leprosy, from the US and Belgium to Congo and Korea.

In 1967, the French journalist and humanitarian Raoul Follereau presented the pope with a petition signed by almost 33,000 leprosy patients, calling for the beatification of Father Damien. In 1977, Pope Paul VI declared Damien ā€œvenerableā€, the first step toward canonisation ā€“ which eventually occurred in 2009 under Pope Benedict XVI.

From leprosy to HIV/AIDS

But how did the patron saint of people living with leprosy become, informally, a patron saint of people living with HIV and AIDS? Given the Catholic Churchā€™s traditional stances against homosexuality, condoms and extramarital sex, the notion can seem paradoxical.

Comparisons between the two diseases were made from the early days of the AIDS crisis: Both were considered mysterious and frightening and severely stigmatised, with sufferers often viewed as ‘dirty’ or ‘sinful’. Many caregivers were afraid to even touch AIDS patients.

Invoking Father Damienā€™s example became a way for religious organisations to legitimise their HIV/AIDS outreach in the eyes of the church and to emphasise their concern for patientsā€™ social stigma ā€“ even if the Catholic Church itself was helping to perpetrate that stigma, and arguably the disease itself.

In 2003, for example, Cardinal Alfonso Lopez Trujillo, president of the Pontifical Council for the Family, wrote that ā€œthe use of condoms goes against human dignity. Condoms change the beautiful act of love into a selfish search for pleasure ā€“ while rejecting responsibility. Condoms do not guarantee protection against HIV/AIDS. Condoms may even be one of the main reasons for the spread of HIV/AIDS.ā€

Even in 2009, the year Damien was canonised, Pope Benedict remarked that the AIDS epidemic ā€œcannot be overcome through the distribution of condoms; on the contrary, they increase itā€ ā€“ an attitude out of touch with most US Catholicsā€™ views, not to mention medical science. The popeā€™s statement provoked such outrage that the Belgian Parliament even condemned it.

But many in the Catholic Church responded to the AIDS crisis with empathy. In 1985, for example ā€“ just a few years after the disease had been identified ā€“ the New York Archdiocese opened a treatment facility at St Clareā€™s Hospital, the stateā€™s first specialised AIDS unit.

A number of ministries turned to Father Damien as inspiration for AIDS-related work, years before the church officially made him a saint. Likely the oldest is Damien Ministries, founded in 1987 ā€œto serve the poorest of the poor living with HIV and AIDS, as inspired by the life of the blessed Father Damien”. The Washington, DC-based ministry adopted a solidarity approach modelled after Damienā€™s ministry on Molokai, citing parallels between leprosy and HIV/AIDS.

Other Damien-inspired organisations include the Albany Damien Center, the Damien Center of Indiana ā€“ founded as a collaboration between Catholics and Episcopalians ā€“ and St Damien Hospital in Haiti.

A tapestry with a colored border depicts a portrait of Father Damien, wearing a hat and glasses.
A tapestry depicting Father Damien, born Jozef De Veuster, hangs from the St Peter Basilica facade during a canonisation ceremony at the Vatican. AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino

Damien serves as what religion historian Robert Orsi calls an ā€œarticulatory pivot pointā€: a way people ā€“ HIV/AIDS patients, in this case ā€“ can use their faith to reshape their experience and gain agency, even as that same religion stigmatises them as powerless ‘others’.

As a canonised saint, Damien is embraced by the highest levels of the church. Yet as a man who embraced those the rest of society had rejected, joining them and even dying for them, he also represents people at the margins.

Mark Lambert, teaching fellow, University of Chicago Divinity School

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