
If
you are wondering what this is all about. Read the article that
USA Today wrote (below)
Incredible,
New Holy Land Theme Park Opens in Orlando, Florida On Monday!!!
A
half-hour from the Magic Kingdom, the Holy Land rises. The white
and gold temple of King Herod pierces the sky six stories above
the Qumran Caves, where ancient Jews stashed the Dead Sea Scrolls.
A palm-tree grove away, the Via Dolorosa, the path to Jesus' crucifixion,
wends its way to Calvary's Garden Tomb, where robed townsfolk
celebrate the resurrection of Christ. So what if the temple is
half as big as the original, the caves are 500,000 pounds of concrete,
not sandstone, the Via Dolorosa is a fig toss from Interstate
4 and the robed Israelites are actually costumed Floridians? In
Orlando, this is a cultural oasis -- or desert, depending on whom
you ask.
The
Holy Land Experience gives God's waiting room a $16 million, multimedia
makeover. When the Jerusalem City Gate opens Monday, visitors
clutching ''passports'' (brochures, really) will be transported
''7,000 miles away and 3,000 years back in time'' to the sights,
sounds, textures and tastes of the ancient Middle East, in the
space of 15 acres and a few hours. No one knows how to categorize
it. A theme park? The biblical motif does seem ubiquitous, from
the armored and plastic-speared Romans guarding the gate to the
Goliath Burger at the Oasis Palms Cafe. An amusement park? Well,
there are no rides per se, but plenty of educational entertainment,
according to Zion's Hope, the non-denominational evangelical ministry
that built this Holy Land adjacent to its offices. Zion's Hope
calls its handiwork a ''living museum,'' and, indeed, Old and
New Testament stories are told through a dozen dramatists wearing
dozens more robes. Some call it sanitized, shrink-wrapped sacrilege.
Others call it offensive, if not insidious. Still others call
it the fastest way to the Promised Land, save for a first-class
ticket on El Al.
But
all agree they've never seen anything like it. Safe way to tour
the sites ''There's a sense we're going where nobody's gone before,''
says Marvin Rosenthal, president of Zion's Hope and creator of
the Holy Land Experience. ''We're using high-tech methods to communicate
the Bible,'' a tome in which ''the message stays fixed but the
methods are flexible.'' Except to some, Rosenthal is muddying
the message. Rosenthal is one of the country's 250,000 Hebrew
Christians, also known as Messianic Jews -- Jews who believe that
Jesus is the Messiah -- and his version of Holy Land reflects
that. At the park, Jewish and Christian traditions blend: tabernacles
intertwine with thorny crowns; menorahs share shelf space with
Christian Bibles in the gift shop. For many critics, this theological
brew is more alarming than the fact that it costs money to witness
it. After 25 years of hosting teaching tours abroad, in the actual
sand-swept Holy Land, Rosenthal -- a Jew-cum-ordained Baptist
minister -- became convinced that folks back home would ''learn
so much more by being able to see and touch and feel and smell
the important sites.''
So
he asked the designers at Orlando-based ITEC Entertainment to
transform 30 tons of boulders and 12 species of palms -- and a
plethora of plaster and paint -- into Babylon and beyond. ''If
people want to see the real Raiders of the Lost Ark,'' Rosenthal
says, ''this is the place to come,'' albeit at three-quarters
the size of God's specs. ''As real places get dangerous the way
Jerusalem has, one compromise between real and virtual reality
is this place that's in between,'' explains John Stilgoe, an architectural
historian at Harvard. ''I have no word for it, but you'll see
a lot more of it.'' In the past, religious theme parks either
never saw the light (Florida's Bible World) or fizzled from fraud
and scandal (Jim Bakker's multimillion-dollar Heritage USA near
Charlotte, N.C.). This time, what's fueling the Holy Land Experience
is a ''terrific rising force in traditional Christianity,'' Stilgoe
says, pointing to the swath of red (Bush voters) through the middle
of fall's electoral map. ''These people are affluent and well-educated,
but they're not about to go to Jerusalem,'' he adds, predicting,
''I think (Rosenthal) is going to have a rip-roaring success.''
Specific
appeal
Not
if Rosenthal's critics can help it. ''If it winds up as something
strictly for Christians, I have nothing against it,'' says Philip
Abramowitz of the Jewish Community Relations Council in New York.
''But if certain programs show Jews with Moses in the desert and
all of a sudden flip to a scene showing Jesus, this bothers me.''
Abramowitz is alluding to a 20-minute show at the Wilderness Tabernacle,
which juxtaposes Jewish prayer with a Christian Nativity scene.
It's climaxed by a 40-mph blast of fake fog (carbon dioxide, water
and glycol) and a 600-watt rumble from a set of bass speakers.
Many find the image -- spreading the Word in part in Hebrew --
unsettling. And the very terms ''Hebrew Christian'' or ''Messianic
Jew'' strike most Jews as oxymorons.
''To
be a Jew for Jesus is like a ham-and-cheese sandwich at an Orthodox
bar mitzvah,'' says Irv Rubin of the Los Angeles-based Jewish
Defense League. The JDL plans to ''take on'' the attraction on
opening day by protesting in front of the park as well as Rosenthal's
home. Rosenthal makes no apologies for proselytizing, but insists
his is an equal-opportunity conversion system. ''We don't single
out Jewish people. We believe the Gospel is for the world,'' he
says. ''We don't buttonhole people or corner people or mislead
people. We're presenting non-controversial biblical Christian
truths.''
Selling
religion
Still,
many find the notion of paying admission to pray at the altar
of any faith disturbing. ''This trivializes the fundamental story
of Christianity by turning its characters into theme-park characters,''
says Rabbi Merrill Shapiro of Congregation Beth Am, one of 10
Jewish congregations in greater Orlando. ''Minnie and Mickey are
not Mary and Joseph. The Three Wise Men are not Huey, Dewey and
Louie.'' Admission prices are less than half of what Disney and
Universal charge, and only 180,000 visitors are needed annually
to stay in the black. (By comparison, Disney attracts as many
as 15 million guests a year.) ''We're not huckstering God,'' insists
Rosenthal, who volunteers that his salary, just under $70,000,
is the highest on the 100-person staff. After operating costs
are paid, any profits will be funneled into Zion's Hope. ''This
is very reverent and very biblical, and I think people will be
awed.''
''If
this takes off, in 15 years the Holy Land will start to be in
the minds of American children what they saw on their vacation
to Florida,'' Harvard's Stilgoe says. ''It's not good or bad,
but it's very persuasive, and it gets very intriguing.''