After completing her studies and already married to Marcus Aurelius Aponte, she moved to
Chaco where she worked as a bilingual rural school teacher. There she first encountered social problems such as villagers without land, and the extreme poverty in which the Indians lived.
Political militancy and poetry In 1947, she joined the
Febreristas, a socialist movement in which her brother, Miguel Angel Soler, was already active. She participated actively in the struggle against the dictator
Moríñigo, wanting to address social inequalities that existed in the country. After the
Civil War of 1947, she was forced into exile in Buenos Aires, where she continued to contact the Febreristas Liberation Bloc, defending the Marxist positions within the movement. It was in exile that she began to compose poems, in which she related the experiences of her life. In her poems are her aesthetic definitions, her commitment, her longing for her homeland. Those dated 1955, 1960 and 1968 contain her testimony from prison. ==References==