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  • 2015-10-16 (xsd:date)
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  • Is Six Flags Closing Their Theme Parks to the Public to Host 'Muslim Family Day?' (en)
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  • In September and October 2015, a flyer for an event called Muslim Family Day (most commonly specific to an 11 October 2015 event at the Six Flags Over Georgia theme park) began circulating among social media users. Many tweets and Facebook comments indicated users were unfamiliar with Muslim Family Day, its scope, or its purpose. According to the event's web site, the Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA) began organizing Muslim Family Day outings across the United States in 2000: In 2015, ICNA organized at least two Muslim Family Day events at Six Flags theme parks. On 14 September 2015, Six Flags Great Adventure in Jackson, New Jersey, was reserved for the event, as shown by a flyer available on the park's web site: The 11 October 2015 Muslim Family Day at Six Flags Over Georgia was listed on the park's web site along with several other separate private events held there, such as Math and Science Day, Physics Day, Relay for Life American Cancer Society Luminara Ceremony, and the Scream Out Loud LGBT Pride Party: Among rumors circulating on social media were claims that Six Flags locations were closed to non-Muslims on Muslim Family Day events, or that Christians were denied permission to organize similar events: Both inferences were misleading. Muslim Family Day is one of several private events organized by a variety of groups at Six Flags locations across the United States; when a group pays to rent a Six Flags park for a private event, it's up to that group to determine how to distribute tickets for the event. Moreover, most Six Flags parks have a Religious Group Events page, and Six Flags St. Louis, for example, features a description geared towards attracting private events for Christian groups: The wording appears to be part of a general Six Flags template, as a nearly identical page was found on the web site for Six Flags Magic Mountain in California. One such upcoming event slated for that venue is the 7 November 2015 Life Teen Catholic Youth Rally, and a flyer [PDF] for an August 2015 event at Six Flags St. Louis definitively answers the question of when Christian Family Day would be held by the amusement park chain: In addition, there was Christian Family Night at Magic Mountain on 11 September 2015 (and a Hallelujah Jubilee the following day), a Christian music festival at Six Flags over Washington, D.C. in August 2015 [PDF], an April 2015 Christian Concert Weekend, and a Christian Fellowship Day hosted at Six Flags Over Georgia in July 2015. Many of the Christian-themed Six Flags events prior to July 2015 were subsequently archived and can no longer be accessed (so those events are likely just a handful of many that have occurred over the years). So while it's true that at least three Six Flags parks hosted a Muslim Family Day in 2015, many more Christian-themed private events have been held at the chain's parks (and contrary to some rumors, no uproar of offended Muslims has sought to stop them or threatened a boycott). Muslim Family Day (like any other private event) is for ticket-holders only, but non-Muslims who wished to attend were neither prohibited from doing so nor banned from the parks. Each Six Flags location features a page inviting groups to book religious events, and those pages primarily focus on Christian groups, churches, and organizations in their wording. (en)
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