Baltimore Sun Sunday

New Marriott rooms get Bible, Book of Mormon

- By Dee-Ann Durbin

Sheraton, Westin and other Starwood hotels are finding their religion.

Marriott Internatio­nal, which bought Starwood two years ago, has begun putting copies of the Bible and the Book of Mormon in the recently acquired hotels. By year’s end, it expects to place the books in 300,000 rooms.

Marriott, whose namesake founding family is active in the Mormon church, has been putting both the Bible and the Book of Mormon in its rooms since opening its first hotel in the late 1950s. Like most major chains, Marriott doesn’t own the majority of its hotels. However, it stands out from the other companies by requiring its 6,500 properties to have the books in each room.

It’s not a policy Marriott relishes discussing. The company declined to make an executive available to comment, but issued a statement to The Associated Press: “There are many guests who are not digitally connected who appreciate having one or both of these books available. It’s a tradition appreciate­d by many, objected to by few.”

Judging from lively internet discussion­s, however, travelers are divided on the issue. Some say they’re not bothered by seeing a Bible or a Book of Mormon in the room, and note that they’re usually tucked away in a drawer. But others say they have complained to managers and asked for the books to be removed.

Marriott gets the Bibles for free from Gideons Internatio­nal, a group that donates Bibles to prisons, hospitals, hotels and other public places. The costs for the Books of Mormon are shared by the Marriott Foundation and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints.

Marriott is alone among big hotel chains in requiring religious materials in its rooms. Hilton and IHG, which owns Holiday Inn and other brands, say they let local hotel managers decide whether to offer Bibles. Hyatt has no official policy, but says it will obtain religious texts if guests ask for them.

According to STR, a hotel data firm, the number of U.S. hotels that offer religious materials in their rooms has dropped over the last decade, to 79 percent in 2016 from 95 percent in 2006. Luxury hotels were the least likely to offer them, with just 51 percent saying they did. And urban and resort hotels were less likely to offer them than hotels in suburbs or along interstate­s.

The change at some of the former Starwood hotels could come as a surprise to some guests; Marriott says those rooms haven’t had religious materials in them until now. Starwood — which was founded by Jewish businessma­n Barry Sternlicht in 1991 — also includes nearly a dozen brands such as the St. Regis, Le Meridien, Aloft and Four Points.

Starwood’s 50 W hotels won’t get the books. Neither will the 140 independen­tly owned Design Hotels, most of which are in Europe. Marriott’s youth-focused Moxy brand and its luxury Edition brand also don’t have the books in their rooms.

Marriott says there’s no single reason why religious materials are excluded from some properties.

“With any of our brands, there are hundreds of decisions made about the look and feel of the brand, how a room will be outfitted, what amenities it will have,” the company said in its emailed statement.

Hotels in certain locations — such as Vietnam and Indonesia — also don’t have a Bible or a Book of Mormon because it might be considered inappropri­ate, Marriott said.

 ?? TOMMY DANIELSEN/AP ?? Boxes of Bibles sit in a cart at Sheraton Rockville Hotel in Rockville, Md.
TOMMY DANIELSEN/AP Boxes of Bibles sit in a cart at Sheraton Rockville Hotel in Rockville, Md.

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