




When I was growing up in the city there was a flourishing intellectual scene partly located in café Ta'amon but also prevalent in private homes. I remember everybody meeting, drinking and arguing deep into the night … something like the salon tradition in Europe meets the Jerusalem neighborhoods of Talbiya, Talpiot and the German Colony. [4]The In-House Festival was part of a larger event, the Jerusalem Season of Culture, for which Mautner serves as Artistic Director. It ran from May through July 2011 and hosted a variety of world-class events in compelling locations: for instance, a performance by the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, then on its farewell tour, at the Jerusalem Museum, and the Swedish director Pia Fosgren’s staging of Steve Reich’s string quartet Different Trains, in the former Ottoman prison, the Kishle. Yet my host and a festival sponsor, the Schusterman Foundation, specifically asked me to be a part of a salon audience rather than to attend the staging of contemporary culture in the public forum of the city.



The concept of a "home" in Jerusalem opens the door to weighty national considerations that reach back to the First Temple, the Second Temple. And to questions such as: Who does this house belong to? And who has the key? [5]The importance of Mautner’s biblical allusion to home and stranger extends beyond his reference to the temples of antiquity. Palestinians and Jews have common roots in ancient nomadic peoples who depended so deeply upon mutual hospitality for survival that it became an expected and cultural norm. In this context, “stranger” is not a permanent characteristic but rather a conferred status understood in relation to a similarly unstable idea of "host." In the largest social framework, we all originate in a condition of belonging, to home, family or tribe; and we all become strangers when we sojourn and then enter the home of another, whom we expect to welcome us according to seemingly absolute, ritualized obligations of guest-friendship, These rules of hospitality assert that the stranger is a guest (unless proven to be an enemy), who is to be sustained with food and shelter for the length of stay, which is understood to be temporary unless the stranger becomes part of the family. In return, the stranger acknowledges dependence on the goodwill of the host, who is master of the house. [6]
