A fact from Anna Hájková appeared on Wikipedia's
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Did you know... that Anna Hájková says her research into LGBT people and the Holocaust "shows a more complex, more human, and more real society beyond monsters and saints"?
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The fact that Prof. Hajkova "identifies as Jewish," included in this article, is of questionable accuracy. Other than one article in the Guardian, I have not been able to find a single other source to corroborate this fact. The relevant quote from the Guardian article in question simply reads "The Jewish Czech academic, who is also a descendant of Holocaust victims..." I believe the newspaper incorrectly assumed she was Jewish due to her parents surviving the camps. They were active in the resistance movement, and have been recognized by Yad Vashem as "righteous about the Nations," a title granted to non-Jews who selflessly helped Jews escape the Holocaust during WWII. I will remove the reference from this article, if someone finds more source to corroborate her claim we can revert.
Toadchavay (
talk)
21:39, 25 January 2023 (UTC)reply
Toadchavay on Twitter, Hájková has posted that she is descended from Jewish Holocaust survivors on her mother's side. Given her occupation I don't think she is lying about it. It should probably be changed just to "is Jewish". (
t ·
c) buidhe22:06, 25 January 2023 (UTC)reply
Can you link me to the relevant tweet? She has two famous grandparents,
Alena Hájková and
Miloš Hájek both of whom survived the Holocaust, but were not Jewish. They were sent to the camps because they helped Czech Jews hide from the Nazis, and were active in the resistance movement. Since they were named Righteous Among Nations, they are both definitely not Jewish. However Hajkova may be referring to different people when she talks about having survivors on her mother's side, I haven't been able to find anything about her other set of grandparents.
Toadchavay (
talk)
20:25, 15 February 2023 (UTC)reply
I cannot figure out how to search through an individual's twitter account, and I'm not going to scroll through months of tweets to find it. But I definitely remember seeing a thread about her maternal grandfather, I think named Pavel, who was half-Jewish and managed to avoid being deported during the war, then afterwards married a Jewish woman. Their daughter was Hájková's mother. (
t ·
c) buidhe05:14, 16 February 2023 (UTC)reply