http://orlando.bizjournals.com/orlando/stories/2002/12/16/story1.html
Beginning in 1975, Disney began offering religious services at the Polynesian Luau area, attracting up to 1,600 people each week and up to 4,500 on Christmas.
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In those early years, there weren't any nearby churches, says Disney spokeswoman Rena Callahan. But now, says Callahan, there are multiple churches in the area — and 18 Disney resorts.
"As we expanded the number of hotel rooms, it became difficult to provide a single space for all the guests who wanted to worship," she says.
"It's not a question of it being the right thing to do," says Callahan. "We're not saying we don't care about this. It isn't a question of morality. It's a question of being able to accommodate the demand."
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Says Disney's Callahan, "We felt we couldn't accommodate it and felt the need to offer more than one type of opportunity to worship. There are so many faiths, that it would be wrong to have just a Protestant service available."
Having a weekly nondenominational service on Disney property was proposed as an alternative, she says, "but we believed we would have had the same challenge" with accommodating the number of people wishing to worship.
Pizam defends Disney's argument, saying that it would be unfair to offer worship services that didn't have room for all who wanted to attend.
"Who do you turn away?" he asks. "Sometimes you're better off not offering it at all, than turning people away."