After the end of the Nazi occupation, she became involved in the relief association for Spanish deportees in the USSR and in Confédération nationale du travail (CNT), the main French anarchist union.
[2] From a very young age, she became an anti-clerical, anarchist, and feminist, opposing the traditional roles assigned to women in her society.
[2] She later met another anarchist resistance fighter, Josep Ester Borras, a deportee to Mauthausen, whom she married.
[2] Together, they significantly organized the activities of the Spanish Federation of Deportees and Political Internees (FEDIP), of which Borras was one of the founders.
[2] The organization aimed to provide support to anti-Stalinist Spanish deportees in the USSR, including socialists, anarchists, and trotskyists.