[1] In 1920, Ivan Blavatskyi, together with like-minded people, initiated the construction of a symbolic grave in memory of those who died in World War I.
The priest came to the starosta and asked on behalf of the entire community for permission to put a cross on the square by the road, without mentioning what his goal was.
Together with the blacksmith Mykhailo Prokopovych and his sons Ivan and Mariian, they made a plan to use the iron staples that were used to cover the trenches to make a large cross on the high grave.
[2][3] Every year during the Polish occupation, on the Green week, the monument became the center of manifestos of the Ukrainian population of the surrounding villages.
A department of the NKVED arrived from Probizhna immediately and searched for the organizers of this event, but they never found them.