St. Nicholas Church
The St. Nicholas Church in Ruská Bystrá is the smallest and most eastern of UNESCO's wooden churches in the Slovak Carpathians. The church was built in 1730 and contains a rare "Crucifixion" on the altar.
The St. Nicholas Church in Ruská Bystrá is the smallest and most eastern of UNESCO's wooden churches in the Slovak Carpathians. The church was built in 1730 and contains a rare "Crucifixion" on the altar.
The cemetery was used until World War II, and the most recently preserved gravestone dates to 1938. It preserves 50 gravestones from 1836 to 1938. The site was fenced by ESJF in June 2017.
Presumably, the Jewish cemetery in Zarichevo was established in the 19th century. According to epigraphic data, it already existed in 1852. The cemetery was used presumably until WWII, although the most recent preserved gravestone dates to 1936.
The cemetery preserves the remains of at least 65 tombstones which date from between 1851 and 1943. The site was fenced by ESJF in December 2018.