Forced quarantined, social distancing and other similar restrictions faced by people these days due to fears surrounding COVID-19 are nuisances that many leprosy patients had to face for decades.
Back when there was no cure, many shunned those with the disfiguring disease, fearing that it was highly contagious or even hereditary. As a result, many with leprosy were forcibly confined to colonies like Malaysia’s Valley of Hope until the late 1960s when forced segregation ended. Babies born to parents with leprosy were immediately taken away out of the fear of contagion. These babies were either taken in by charities or given up for adoption. Thanks to TV journalist and activist Tan Ean Nee, some of these children have reunited with their parents.
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