The Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary is a wooden church, which represents a unique monument of folk wooden architecture, and whose first mentions date back to 1750. In 1949, under the Soviet rule, the church was closed and gradually began to fall into decay, but later in the 1960s, it was renovated, with a museum of local lore opened inside. Clearly, the status of a museum, in a sense, saved the temple from reconstruction. Perhaps, one of the main characteristics of the church is that it’s one of the very few wooden churches with preserved original interior, along with its porch with carved columns and a triangle roof. The bell tower, which stands next to the church, is one of the most impeccable creations of the Hutsul folk architecture in terms of its design. At present, the church holds services for the congregants of the Greek Catholic community to whom the church was made available in 1995.