On the site of the current church of St. Anthony, there was once a wooden one, but in 1812 it was burned by the French. Soon the construction of a new stone temple in the eclectic style began. The tsarist government allocated 2,000 silver rubles and allowed the former customs buildings to be disassembled into bricks, and the landowner Slavinsky donated one hundred thousand bricks. But the collected funds were not enough to complete the construction, and the work was suspended. The temple was opened only in 1853. It was closed in the 1930s. During the Second World War, captured Red Army soldiers were kept in its cellars. After the war, the building housed a weaving workshop, a furniture store, a weight workshop, and a granary. Later, it was partially renovated to open a cafe and a club here. In 1993 the church was returned to believers. This is the only active Catholic church in the three surrounding areas.