Her father, Alexander Vosipavich, rented a small estate, which was the main income of the family, and raised seven children - two sons and five daughters.
She graduated from a two-grade school in Buynichy, near Mogilev, after which she passed the exams for the title of home teacher of Russian language and geography.
It was probably there that she met deputy Zmicier Zhylunovich and (perhaps under his influence) joined the Belarusian Socialist Assembly (BSG).
In July, the newspaper "Volnaya Belarus" reported on her trip to Buda-Kashalev and Gomel, where she conducted party work.
sent a telegram to Wilhelm II, Badunov was recalled from the post of People's Secretary by the left wing of the Society.
On December 13, at the organizational meeting, she read a declaration that the Council of the BNR is severing ties with the bourgeoisie, overthrowing the bourgeois government, creating a new, revolutionary one headed by Vaclau Lastouski, and going underground.
The Poles immediately began arresting SRs (including Lastouski and Jazep Mamońka), but they captured Badunova only in February 1920.
On May 31, 1920, she signed the resolutions of the conference of BPSR members on confidence in the policy of the cabinet of Lastouski and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the BNR, Ya.
In addition, Badunova's health was significantly undermined by tuberculosis she had contracted during her imprisonment by the Poles, and she had to undergo a course of treatment at a resort on the Riga coast.
On the night of February 16-17, 1921, before the conclusion of the Treaty of Riga, during the campaign for the forced "liquidation of the BPSR", Badunova was arrested, together with other members of the party, by the Bolsheviks.
But before leaving Poland, Badunova managed to meet and speak before the figures of the Belarusian national movement in Vilnius, Danzig, miraculously avoiding detention.
During this period she entered the Ukrainian Higher Pedagogical Institute, since renamed after Mykhailo Drahomanov, but was unable to complete her studies due to poor health and frequent illnesses.
Badunova was shaken by the news of the liquidation of the BPSR, by decision of the party congress, which took place in Minsk in October 1924.
Together with Momonka on October 14, 1923, she demanded to convene the Presidium of the Council of the BNR and resolve the issue of the government, but P. Pyotra Krecheuski and Zakharka did not agree to that.
In 1923, the government of the BSSR announced an amnesty to the members of the Belarusian movement who did not fight with weapons in their hands.
For the next five years, she lived with her sister Maria in Minsk, trying to establish cooperation with the Institute of Belarusian Culture.
Anatoly Sidorevich has written that Badunova was in love with her fellow party member Tamaš Hryb and, despite not being his wife, sometimes identified herself as Badunova-Hryb.