Description of the attraction
The Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Sarya - this is now the name of the Saryan church dedicated to the Virgin Mary. The majestic neo-Gothic church was built by the architect Gustav Schacht in 1857.
Tourists who come to see the sights are surprised by the fabulously beautiful red church directed into the sky - a real Gothic in the middle of the most ordinary Belarusian village. It is called the Red Crystal or Stone Organ, because in a strong wind, a lonely carved tall building emits a mournful howl.
The Red Church is a monument to touching, devoted and sad love. It was built by the inconsolable widower Ignatius Lopatinsky - the offspring of a wealthy gentry family, in memory of the untimely deceased (in childbirth) young beloved wife Maria.
In long-suffering Belarus, inter-confessional wars never died down. In those days, the power belonged to the Orthodox. For the construction of a Catholic church, one could go straight to Siberia. Ignatius Lopatinsky was lucky - the tsarist officials considered him abnormal, they decided that he had lost his mind from grief. Would it ever occur to anyone to build a temple right in the cemetery? The widower explained his intention by the desire to erect a monument to his beloved wife.
The inconsolable Pan Lopatinsky managed not only to complete and consecrate the temple, but also to build an amazingly beautiful park around the cemetery. However, envious people reported to the authorities and the beautiful church was forcibly transferred to Orthodoxy under the name of the Resurrection Church.
During the Soviet era, the temple was completely used for storing fertilizers, and then they were going to make a two-story entertainment facility in it. Oddly enough, the war spared a beautiful Gothic monument, but only one gate remained from the former rich Lopatinsky estate.
In our time, on the initiative of the local director of the state farm Vladimir Skrobov, a partial restoration of the church was carried out. In 1989, the temple was transferred to the Orthodox Church and consecrated as the Church of the Assumption of the Most Holy Theotokos.