Vorona was born on 7 April 1931 in Olenivka [ce; pl; ro; ru; uk] in the Mahdalynivka Raion, Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, Ukraine.
[1] She was the youngest of four children in a peasant family of collective farmers who moved to the Mahdalynivka Raion in the early 1920s from the surrounding Poltava Oblast.
[2] When the Great Patriotic War began in June 1941, she and her elder sister were assigned to bring farm livestock such as cows and sheep across the Volga, while her two older brothers died fighting on the front lines.
[4] She was a 1973 graduate of the Higher Party School at the Central Committee of the CPSU [et; ka; pl; ru],[1] after four years of studying.
Vorona oversaw the construction of various buildings, a large-scale gasification of the region, and the May 1985 opening of the district historical and local history museum.
[4] During the era of perestroika,[2] Vorona chaired the district society for the struggle for sobriety, the council of veterans of Olenovka village and was a member of the presidium of the councils of veterans of the Magdalinivska Settlement Territorial Community [uk] and the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.
Vorona was conferred the title of Hero of Socialist Labour with the Order of Lenin and the "Hammer and Sickle" gold medal [az; ba; be; ka; pl; ru; tr; tt; uk] "for the successes achieved in the development of animal husbandry, the increase in the production of meat, milk, eggs, wool and other products" by a decree of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union on 22 March 1966.
[4] She was presented with the Certificate of Honor of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR [ru; uk],[4] the Order of Friendship of Peoples and the Medal "For Distinguished Labour".