A village in the Poviat of Lublin, on the Czerniejówka river. Historic sights include a church from the turn of the XVI and XVII centuries, in the type of the Lublin Renaissance style. In the nearby cemetery, next to the graves of people of merit for the parish and the mass grave of the patriots executed in 1942, we can find an unusual, old tombstone in the form of an earth mound covered with concrete (erected according to the old tradition of burials).
The parish church of st. Lawrence was erected in the years 1608-1611 thanks to the efforts of Agnieszka Jastkowska - the prioress of the Brigid convent in Lublin, and the senior of the monastery chaplains, Fr. Andrzej Bietkiewicz. In place of the wooden chapel, a brick single-nave church in the Lublin Renaissance type was built, designed by architect Jan Wolff. The barrel vault with lunettes is decorated with stucco. The most valuable elements of the temple's furnishings include the XVII century paintings of St. Lawrence and St. Agnes, pulpit and baptismal font from the middle of the XVIII century, and the consecration plaque with the Bibersztein coat of arms of the bishop of Kiev, Krzysztof Kazimierski, from 1611. In the years 1913-1915, the church was expanded according to the design of the architect Władysław Siennicki. The façade was completely transformed with a two-column portico. In 1928, artist Czesław Miklasiński made a polychrome that has survived up to this day.