Josef ValÃÂÃÂk (; 2 November 1914 â 18 June 1942) was a Czech army officer and member of the Resistance in German-occupied Czechoslovakia. He took part in the firefight during the aftermath of the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich by Jozef GabÃÂÃÂk and Jan Kubià ¡, code named Operation Anthropoid.
Josef ValÃÂÃÂk was born in the village of Smolina in Moravia, Austria-Hungary (now part of Valaà ¡ské Klobouky, Czech Republic).
He is buried at the ÃÂáblice Cemetery in Prague.
SS-Obergruppenführer Heydrich, a high-ranking German Nazi official, was chief of the Reich Security Main Office and one of the main architects of the Holocaust. He was also Stellvertretender Reichsprotektor of Bohemia and Moravia in 1942.
The Germans were unable to locate the attackers until Karel ÃÂurda of the "Out Distance" sabotage group turned himself in to the Gestapo and gave them the names of the team's local contacts for the reward of one million Reichsmarks. ValÃÂÃÂk and the others died after a six-hour firefight with Waffen-SS troops and German police in the Saints Cyril and Methodius Cathedral.
Fourteen members of ValÃÂÃÂk's family were arrested, brought to Mauthausen concentration camp and executed.