Scouts, trampers, but also ordinary people began to remember other heroes of the anti-Nazi resistance by climbing Ivančena.
[6] During the Prague Spring, there was a brief revival of Junák, and ascents to Ivančena began to become a regular event attended by thousands of people.
In 1969, chief Scout Rudolf Plajner, commemorated the mound "... for the memorial of all the heroic victims in the fight for free democratic Czechoslovakia.
Bans, controls and orders culminated in April 1981, when a large group of armed members of the StB vainly tried to provoke the participants into some kind of "anti-socialist reaction".
In the days of non-freedom, the "tourist" groups of Sláva Moravec and Karel Líba cared for the mound, and trampers and the gamekeeper Kaňok from Jestřábí also contributed to its maintenance.
Various tablets with messages and slogans were added to the stones, with which their creators expressed not only tribute to the murdered heroes, but also opposition to all forms of totalitarian power.
Each year, on a Saturday near Saint George's Day (23 April), Czech Scouts make a pilgrimage to the site.