Bible Theme Park backer photographed women for adult magazines

One of the backers of the proposed Bible Theme Park USA in Murfreesboro is a very successful businessman but was once more known for his photographs of cover girls and "Pets of the Month" for Penthouse Magazine.
Amnon Bar-Tur's photographs graced the covers of at least one other adult magazine and spanning from the late 60s to the early 80s. A quick online search revealed this and also reference to a 2001 Chapter 11 filing of a photography and media company Bar-Tur co-founded that reportedly owed $34,000,0000 to J.P. Morgan Chase.
J.P. Morgan Chase had given the company a loan of about $35 million to finance a number of mergers, according to an affidavit of David J. Manning, C2 Media's president and chief executive.
C2 Media acquired seven companies just before it began operations in May 1999. It purchased four other companies during the first quarter of 2000, the affidavit said.
Amnon Bar-Tur is in his element bringing big money to big deals. In October of last year, Amnon Bar-Tur was interviewed in a New York Times article about a high end investment club he's a part of called Tiger 21 (The Investment Group for Exceptional Returns in the 21st Century). As Amnon and others suggest in the article, Tiger 21 is also a kind of therapy group from millionaires.
The very act of giving a narrative shape to one’s life story, he said, not only helps the rest of the group better understand that person and his issues and priorities; it also helps the presenter focus on the rationale for decisions he has made and decisions he is considering. That level of depth means the group is uniquely qualified to challenge someone when he is veering off track or dreaming of something that from the perspective of one or more members of the group could prove disastrous.
Amnon's life journey more recently involves organizing capital to back creative theme parks ventures with the help of fellow Tiger 21 members.
Amnon Bar-Tur, managing partner of SafeHarbor Holdings, an investment holding company, recently joined a fellow Tiger member, and together they raised $330 million from investors to build a Hard Rock Theme Park in Myrtle Beach, S.C. "We're wealthy enough where we can pool our assets and open our own doors into alternative investments," says Sonnenfeldt. Indeed, the group's total assets surpass $5 billion.
In 2006, Amnon Bar-Tur announced that partnership on behalf of Safeharbor Holdings, LLC with a fellow Tiger 21 member to bring Hard Rock Park to Myrtle Beach, SC. Two years later, Hard Rock Park's grand opening is now a month away. But two weeks before that grand opening is a May 15 date with the Rutherford County Commission to learn whether another one of Safeharbor's theme park projects will get the county's stamp of approval. Hard Rock Park plans to publish their first quarter earnings on the same day.
According to the proposed park's website, Bible Park USA will be a "park that brings the Bible to life through well-loved, familiar stories and ancient historical experiences." The park is proposed for the Blackman community near 840. The park developer and project sponsor is Amnon Bar-Tur's son, Safeharbor Holding co-founder and managing director Armon Bar-Tur. You might have seen him quoted in stories about the park's progress throughout Rutherford County's approval process.
One person you won't see quoted often in this deal is Armon's father. Amnon has a keen sense for business and made Hard Rock Park a reality, but in the late 60s, 70s and 80s he had a good eye for something entirely different. Amnon, it turns out, is somewhat famous to those who now collect his work published in the pages of Penthouse Magazine. Several editions throughout the early 1970s featuring Amnon's cover girls and Pets of the Month go for as much as $30 online. Editions of Club, a more hard core adult magazine featuring Bar-Tur's work, now go for as much as $300.
Before word of this latest revelation was known to many of the businesses now supporting the developer's plans, local business owner Sharon Petty put the proposed uses of the Blackman Community property in stark religious terms (listen to the audio).
"I mean, we're right smack in the middle of all the Bible belt. So people really look at Murfreesboro as kind of a Mecca. It's a place to actually join in together. Blackman community is really going to benefit from this rather than hurting them. They could have had all kinds of ugly things. They could have even had adult entertainment on that highway, on that freeway. You can actually have adult entertainment. Which one would they rather have? Something with God's book on it, or would they rather have the Devil's den out there?"
It is not clear what the impact, if any, this news will have on supporters of Bible Theme Park USA. but it does raise one very important question. How much due diligence have county commissioners and supporters done when a simple Google search would have revealed this and more?
UPDATE 3:57pm - Jeff Diamond with The Ingram Group, a firm retained by Safeharbor Holdings, LLC as a consultant on public and government relations for Bible Theme Park USA, sent a bio for Amnon Bar-Tur (view full word doc). Ingram Group also shared the following statement from Amnon's son Armon in response to this developing story.
"Surely what a young immigrant photographer did 35 years ago to make a living in his first job out of college as a fashion photographer has no relevance to the development of our world-class tourist attraction in Rutherford County in 2008.
"I am proud of what my father, Amnon Bar-Tur, has accomplished in his lifetime -- from young Israeli soldier and veteran newspaper photographer to head of European operations for SafeHarbor Holding. He has been a wonderful father and mentor to me, and I am saddened that this has become a matter for tabloid-style journalism."



NON-ISSUE Smear campaign
No wonder nothing ever gets done in this country! Anyone who trys to do great things only gets smeared and maligned in the press. The Tennessean should be ashamed for spending any time on this. This guy is the Bible Park's Banker Lender FATHER and who cares what he did in 1960s!! The facts do not seem to matter. The fact that the state and county are desperate for Taxes revenue to fund local schools is never mentioned --- that is the single most important issue here. Second is how much impact on the community - zero - as 60% of the land is greenspace and they will build their own exit ramp to the interstate. Facts, Facts, and more Facts do not seem to matter to the coverage of this issue. So now we are chasing the Banker's father?? Nuts....
Smear?
johnnash, Amnon's photos were published in the 60s, 70s and 80s and this fact can be easily found on Google. The citizens of Rutherford County are smart enough to determine whether or not certain facts readily available online are relevant to a $300 million development deal, and they are certainly smart enough to know the difference between the truth and "tabloid-style journalism" or sensational adult content in Penthouse.
Not a prejudice against Christians, "Diggs"...
No prejudice against Christians, "Diggs". What an asinine thing to say when I've already said I'm a Christian myself (and have been for my entire life, thanks).
I'm prejudiced against tacky and distasteful bazillion-dollar ideas like theme parks that will make Tennessee the laughingstock of the entire planet (when we already suffer enough at being labeled "rednecks" and all the other fine things people say about us and the rest of the South).
And I'm ESPECIALLY prejudiced against the idea of pouring that kind of money into something like this theme park when most likely anyone who might be remotely interested in going to such a thing can likely barely afford to put food on their table or gas in their cars (if they can even afford to keep their cars) right now.
Or maybe you didn't read THAT PART of my earlier comment before you decided to take a shot me and my Christianity? (By the way, some Christian you are for that, huh? Hypocrite.)
I'm pretty sure Jesus said help the poor, not build things that could be likened even to a "temple" (horrors) and charge folks an arm and a leg to enter, not to mention traveling costs. Gonna argue with that? Or is entrance to this Bible theme park and everything in it gonna be free? No? My point.
Simply put, such money could be better spent elsewhere in this time of economic distress. Period. It's just a side result that if this park doesn't get built, then Tennesseans won't have to listen to the thousands of jokes there will be from all over the world snickering about Tennessee being the home of "Bible Disney".
With Lifelong Citizens Like You....
....It's no wonder Tennessee is a laughingstock for the rest of the world.
Well, baptized. If you say so. But a Christian? With the type of prejudices you harbor against Christians?
Hardly.
Whoops
Oops, I see I attributed that quote erroneously to Jeff Diamond ("world class tourist attraction") when it was in fact Armon Bar-Tur who said that.
I still stand by my "world class laughing stock" response in any case. Unfortunately if this embarrassment gets built, good taste shalt not prevail, in my opinion.
World Class?
Oh, Jeff Diamond's quote is rich. "World class tourist attraction"?
More like "world class laughingstock". Sigh.
Proposed "Bible theme park" is an embarrassment to Tennessee
I admittedly haven't read up that much on this proposed Bible theme park, but I can't help but think the very idea of it is completely stupid in this time of economic crisis. I'd think that money could be better spent other ways, not to mention the fact that one would assume much of a Bible theme park's target market demographic is probably too broke right now to travel, much less plunk down the kind of dollars that get spent at a theme park, Bible or no. Other than the very rich and well off, nobody can afford things like that right now and I suspect most of the demographic that would be interested in a Bible theme park does not fall into the well off nor rich category.
Secondly, the fact that it's proposed for Murfreesboro - I'm just going to start telling people I went to college in Nashville instead of my alma mater of MTSU. I have never lived outside of Tennessee in my life and I'm pretty used to the jokes about Tennesseeans and Southerners that I get from those ALL over the planet for years and years - including the fact that we're in the "middle of the Bible belt" - but to have a Bible theme park here just makes Tennessee more fodder for ridicule. I can hardly wait for the "Oh, you're from Tennessee... isn't that where (snicker) Bible Disney (snicker) is?" and further guffaws ensue.
Just when I think Tennessee is FINALLY starting to get some respect from the rest of the globe, then we get stuff like this. I get tired of Tennessee and the South being the butt of jokes for the rest of the country and the world, and unfortunately things like this idiotic proposed Bible theme park just do NOT help.
And yes, I'm baptized and a Christian, and I still find the whole idea completely embarrassing for the state of Tennessee and especially Murfreesboro and Rutherford County.
As for Amnon and the Penthouse connection - snicker unto itself. Heh.
The rides at Bible Park USA
Amnon Bar-Tur could provide some useful advice on theme park attractions at Bible Park USA. Take a ride on the [bleep] of Babylon! Experience the excitement of Jezebel! Snap a photo of Salome unveiled! Sign me up for a season pass.