In 1912 she attended a meeting organised by Konstantyna Malytska for the "Women's Committee" in Lviv to prepare for war.
After the war she worked from 1918 to 1923 as an accountant for the Embassy of Ukraine in Vienna, she also visited Denmark, Germany, Norway, and other states to collect military and political intelligence.
After her imprisonment, materials concerning cooperation with German intelligence were found (the UVO signed an agreement in May 1923 with Weimar Germany's intelligence service, according to which the UVO would conduct espionage work against Poland, while the German side was to provide financial aid and military equipment).
[4][6] Martha Bohachevsky-Chomiak from the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies claims the Polish government initially presented her death as a suicide but subsequent exhumation of her body showed that she had been murdered in their custody.
[4] Her body was exhumed on 26 February, and the Polish forensic expert stated that she had died by hanging.