Andreas Graf, 36, was devastated when his young son, Julius, was diagnosed with Leukemia at the age of 3.
When the boy first began treatment, he had to stay in the hospital for the first nine weeks.
But just as he was about to return home with his family, tragedy struck again.
His mother, Graf’s wife, suddenly died of heart disease.
Knowing he needed to be with his son during such a difficult time, he used all of his annual vacation time to be with Julius.
All too soon though, that time was over, and Graf was forced to return to work.
Those few weeks off, however, were not enough to help him heal from his wife’s death and his son’s illness. Graf began to worry that he would be fired from his job.
But someone had been looking out for the widower. HR manager Pia Meier knew she needed to help, so she reached out Graf’s colleagues with a request.
Meier asked each of them if they’d be willing to donate overtime hours to Graf so that he could spend more time with his son.
The response to her request was overwhelming. Every single one of the company’s 650 employees signed up, even though many of them didn’t even know him.
After just two weeks, Graf’s coworkers had earned 3,264.5 hours to donate to him.