The Holocaust isn’t just something out of the history books. For Faye Dion and about a dozen other lawyers for Aetna, the Hartford-based insurance giant, it’s the focus of an intensive, emotional pro bono project.
The attorneys are meeting with elderly survivors of the brutal Nazi regime to see if they qualify for reparations being offered by the German government. It is eye-opening work. Dion sounds in awe as she describes the harrowing personal tales of survival.
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