Alena Hájková (née Divišová; 11 October 1924 – 2 August 2012) was a Czech Communist resistance fighter and historian.
[2] Later, the gentiles in the group helped the Jewish members to avoid transports by giving them false, non-Jewish identities.
[2] In March 1944, she was arrested and deported to the Theresienstadt Small Fortress and in July 1944 to Ravensbrück concentration camp.
Before her liberation in April 1945, she was made to do forced labor for the German armament industry, specifically the firm Hasag in the Schlieben and Altenburg satellite camps of Buchenwald.
[2] Upon her return to Prague, Hájková learned that her fiancé had been arrested together with most of the Přehledy group in August 1944, and murdered in Auschwitz.
[2] During normalization, she spent her last working years as specialist in the defense ministry, where it was her job to write confirmations of participation in the resistance according to the law 255/1946.