In 1914, Blazhkevych’s husband, Ivan Blazhkevych, was appointed director of the Zalukvyan school. With the beginning of the
First World War, he was mobilized to the front. Since then, Blazhkevych was in charge of school affairs. She organized the work of the Farmer's Department, the Self-Help Cooperative, the reading room, and the rescue committee to help those returning from exile. On November 1, 1918, Blazhkevych was in Lviv, where she was among the first to take the oath of allegiance to the
Western Ukrainian People's Republic. At the request of Blazhkevych, a hundred young residents of Zalukva took power in Halych on November 2, 1918. In her memoirs of June 9, 1919, Blazhkevych wrote that in 12 days she had survived 17 searches and 8 arrests, during which, in particular, a bayonet was placed on her son
Bohdan’s chest. To avoid persecution, Blazhkevych lived for several months in the woods near the village Krylos and the town of
Rozhniativ. Blazhkevych graduated part-time in 1920 from the Lviv Teachers' Seminary. For a long time, she worked as a teacher and educator of kindergartens in Galician villages and was active in community service among women and youth. The Polish authorities prevented Blazhkevych from running in the election with slander and intimidation. When these means were not sufficient they killed two of her children (two daughters she buried in three days). In 1963, at the insistence of Iryna Wilde and
Oles Honchar, Blazhkevych was admitted to the
Writers' Union of Ukraine. In 1973 Halyna Didyk, an activist, Commander-in-Chief of the
Ukrainian Insurgent Army lived in Blazhkevych’s house, from where she was evicted on the instructions of the
KGB. Until the last days of Blazhkevych’s life she worked in the literary field: she wrote memoirs about her meetings with famous writers of the past, new poems for children. == Private life ==