Brothers Henry and Leo Rosner are a pair of Jewish musicians, Henry on the violin and Leo on the accordion. They are some of the many Jewish people who owe their lives to Oskar Schindler’s rescue efforts. Henry has a wife name Manci and a son named Olek. Though the Płaszów concentration camp leader, Commandant Amon Goeth, is a violent anti-Semite, he frequently calls the Rosner brothers to his villa for parties and seems to enjoy their music. The Rosner brothers’ music seems to have a strange effect on the Nazis—Henry even suggests that their repeated playing of a mournful tune indirectly leads an SS officer to commit suicide. Goeth’s preference for their music is so strong that Henry Rosner has to hide his violin when he travels out of Płaszów to Brinnlitz, so that he will be able to leave. Both Henry and Leo endure heart-wrenching periods of being separated from their families, though in the end they survive. The Rosner brothers represent the complicated relationships Nazis had with certain prisoners, sometimes admiring or favoring them even as they worked them to death.