| Messianic Experience
By Joyce Moed,
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
For Dawn Short
and Jennifer Willis, the wait tovisit a newly opened "messianic
Jewish" theme park was worth it.
Ticket sellers bluntly told Short and her friend Willis when
they arrived on Saturday that the Holy Land Experience park
was too crowded to accept more guests.
But instead of heading home, Short, a Methodist, and Willis,
a Pentecostal, spent some time in Orlando and returned to
the park in the afternoon.
"We were determined to get in," said Short, who
made the two-hour drive from her home to Orlando after reading
about the religious theme park in a local newspaper.
The two women eventually got in. Short says she learned more
about the Bible in just two hours in the park than she did
in years of Bible school.
Josephine Alford, a Christian visiting from northern Florida,
also enjoyed the park. Her only regret was that she couldn't
spend all day in Orlando's newest attraction.
These aren't the only tourists who have headed to Orlando
this month, hoping to find not Disney but the Deity.
Since the newest addition to Orlando's theme park row opened
Feb. 5, some 30,000 visitors have bypassed the world's most
famous mouse to visit the Holy Land Experience, a controversial
park that tries to recreate biblical times through stage productions
and a Middle Eastern marketplace.
The $16 million theme park, which mixes Jewish and Christian
symbols, has sparked heated attacks from some Jewish leaders.
They assert that the park's founder " a former Jew who embraced
Jesus " has created a giant proselytizing tool.
But a protest, planned on the park's opening day by the Jewish
Defense League, fizzled. Many local leaders say the best action
Jewish groups can take against the Holy Land Experience may
be no action at all.
"We have to understand that in a democracy, we have to
tolerate all situations," said Rabbi Joel Levine, spiritual
leader of Temple Judea of West Palm Beach and chairman of
the Cults and Messianics Task Force of the Jewish Federation
of Palm Beach County.
"Everyone has a right to practice their religion. We
can't picket" the park, he said. "We could have
a Jewish Israel park, and we wouldn't want them to picket
it."
Instead, Levine said, Jewish groups should focus their efforts
on education.
"I think the Jewish community is doing a good thing by
letting people know what Holy Land is: a Christian amusement
park," Levine said.
Park founder Marvin Rosenthal says he never intended to hide
that fact.
"Every piece of literature created by the park states
its evangelical purpose," said Rosenthal, who directs
an Orlando-based Christian ministry, Zion's Hope.
But Jewish leaders say the Jewish themes that dominate the
Holy Land Experience are misleading and will deceive people
into believing that Jews support the park's message.
Critics point to the Holy Land Experiences gift shop, for
example, which sells jewelry that contains Jewish stars but
does not sell crosses.
Some Jewish leaders also say Rosenthal's background raises
warning flags.
Rosenthal, an ordained Baptist minister, was born into a Conservative
Jewish family and says he never formally converted to Christianity.
"I think the word that comes to mind immediately is 'deceit,'
" said William Rothschild, assistant regional director
of the Anti-Defamation League's Palm Beach office.
"The organization is entitled to build a theme park,
but our problem is the way it's being presented," Rothschild
said. It's part of Rosenthal's "ministry to entice as
many Jews as he can, to expose them to a mixture of Christian
and Jewish values. We're concerned about it. We feel that
what they're presenting is the philosophy that you can be
both " and if you're not both, you're not complete " and that
invalidates Judaism."
For $17 a ticket, $12 for children, Rosenthal aims to transport
guests 7,000 miles away and 3,000 years back in time. The
journey starts when Moses leads the Israelites out of Egypt
and ends just before the Roman destruction of Jerusalem in
the first century.
There's a 45-foot by 25-foot model of first-century Jerusalem.
Guests also may wander through Calvary's Garden Tomb, a recreation
of Jesus' resting place, where actors portray his death, burial
and resurrection.
A high-tech production of Israel's ancient priestly system
" replete with lightning bolts and fog " awaits visitors within
a model of the Wilderness Tabernacle. Replicas of the Qumran
caves let guests peek at the place where the Dead Sea Scrolls
were discovered in the 20th century.
Costumed actors sing and perform scenes from the Bible in
the marketplace, near a replica of Herod's Temple and alongside
a recreation of the Via Dolorosa.
The biblical theme is evident even in the smallest details.
Recorded sounds of camels, goats and sheep bray from loudspeakers
along the ancient-style paths as street vendors peddle milk
and honey-flavored ice cream.
The theme park was designed by Orlando-based ITEC Entertainment
Corp., which also has created rides for Walt Disney World
and Universal Studios.
Each exhibit at the Holy Land Experience will provide dramatic
and factual insights that will teach the message of the Bible,
Rosenthal said.
Rosenthal said he toyed with the idea of building a religious
theme park for nearly 20 years, inspired by his extensive
tours of Israel. He wanted to make sure everyone had a chance
to visit the Holy Land, even if they couldn't travel overseas,
he said.
The answer to his prayers came in 1989, when Rosenthal heard
about a densely wooded, 19-acre site in Orlando that was tangled
up in a bankruptcy proceeding.
With the backing of some wealthy investors " including Robert
and Judith Van Kampen, whose collection of rare Bibles will
be part of a museum slated to open at the park next year "
Rosenthal offered $1.2 million for the site, a fraction of
its worth.
His offer was accepted and, a few years later, state officials
offered to pay $1.4 million to build a highway interchange
on four acres of Rosenthal's land. To Rosenthal, it was a
sign that God was smiling on his plan.
"The Bible is God's word, and there's no better place
to share that than one of the most major tourist locations
in the world," he said.
The idea that the park targets Jews for conversion is fallacious,
Rosenthal said. So far, fewer than 1 percent of the park's
visitors have been Jewish, he added.
But, he added, "I do believe Jesus is the Messiah, and
to believe in him is the most Jewish thing a Jewish person
can do."
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