How do Martin Buber, Gabriel Marcel, and Emmanuel Levinas respond to the suffering of the other?
Cite scenes from the film to support your answer. The film that we watched last week was the film “The Pianist”, an award-winning and critically-acclaimed film directed by Roman Polanski, starring Adrien Brody. “The Pianist” depicts the memoirs of the Jewish-Polish pianist named Wladyslaw Szpilman, who survived the Holocaust during the German Nazi occupation of Europe in the 1940s. The film featured Mr. Szpilman, a well-known piano player for Warsaw radio, who experienced the downward spiral of his life when the World War II broke out, specifically when the German Nazis invaded Poland in 1939. As the film progresses, Wladyslaw saw the Nazi atrocities to the Jewish people. He and his family lived a poor life in the concentration camps or ghettos consequently, far from what they previously perceived as a happy ending on the German occupation on Poland when they heard that Great Britain and France declared war on the Germans. Wladyslaw later got separated from his family, who were aboard