I wanted my teachers in Austria to be secret priests, like the Czech ones.
She was born in 1955 in Vienna into the family of Daisy and Michael Thun Hohenstein. After her father’s premature death, her mother married Berthold Waldstein-Wartenberg. Her mother, father and stepfather came from prominent Czech noble families, and after being expelled from Czechoslovakia, they deeply missed their homeland. Both her mother and stepfather were active in the Maltese aid organization, which often operated from their family apartment in Skoda-Gasse, Vienna. It wasn’t until Aglaë was thirty that she understood the significant role her parents and their circle played, not only towards refugees from Czechoslovakia but also within the country. For example, they were involved in smuggling hard-to-find medicines and banned books into their former homeland. In 1978, she married the Austrian diplomat Walter Hagg, lived with him on assignment in Italy, Nigeria, and Ireland, among others. Among the most significant moments of Aglaë’s diplomatic career was the canonization of Agnes of Bohemia in Rome, which she personally attended. She has strong family ties, especially to the town of Rokytnice u Přerova, where her mother Daisy came from.