How the Philippines and the Knights of Malta Helped the World Cure Leprosy. “The Land of the Living Dead” — that’s what the leper colony of Culion was once called.
By Spanish royal decree, settlements for the lepers were established in Manila, Cebu, and Nueva Ecija in 1830. The afflicted were allowed to roam in public, and given more freedom during Lepers’ Day, which was Fridays.
Molokai, an island colony in Hawaii, had been under American jurisdiction since the 1880s and served as a model for the Philippine leper colony. The choice of Culion was based on its distance, as it is one of the far-away Palawan Islands, where Spaniards had exiled Filipino criminals and rebels.
Civil Governor Luke Wright issued Executive Order No. 35 on August 22, 1905, naming the island the “Culion Leper Colony Reservation.” This
enabled Heiser, who was promoted to Director of Health that year, to start building there.
Tala Leprosarium, also known as the Central Luzon Sanitarium, was founded by the American colonial government in 1940 in Caloocan, on the northern fringe of Manila. It accommodated sufferers of Hansen’s Disease on the island of Luzon.
Fr. Javier Olazabal, an old Jesuit priest hailing from Spain, landed in Culion on October 15, 1971. He said that it had been his dream to reach Culion and be its Catholic chaplain.
Pedro Picornell, Ramon Pedrosa, and Antonio Infante had been picked by Don José to be his “Three Musketeers.” It was at this point that Soriano, being a devout Catholic, businessman, and philanthropist, was approached by Father Olazabal.
Don Antonio Infante, among Don José Soriano’s “Three Musketeers,” started a non-stock, non-profit foundation, called the Tala Foundation Inc., in 1974, as an adjunct to the Tala Leprosarium founded in 1940.
Led by Don José Soriano as the first Ambassador of the Sovereign Order of Malta to the Philippines, the Embassy of the Order of Malta was officially created in the country in 1978.
The multi-drug therapy (MDT), a type of treatment that consists of giving patients a combination of drugs such as lamprene, rifampicin, and dapsone, was endorsed by the World Health Organization (WHO), in 1981.
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