• Cultural heritage, historical monuments belong to all mankind, and strive to preserve the masterpieces of human thought – the task of all nations. After all, without saving the traces of the past is difficult to build a prosperous future.
    In Moldova, a village Pohrebya Dubasari district, on the bank of the Dniester River in 1912 was built a unique church Aleksievskaya. Its architectural shape is unique indeed, nothing like in Moldova, no. This monument embodies the cultural diversity and the fate of many nations: the temple was built “to order” the Russian Tsar Nicholas II, and turned to God here and Moldovans, and Russian, Ukrainians, and others. It was established that the majestic church was built in Pohrebya health in Russian throne heir Tsarevich Alexei, who was seriously ill. Nicholas II was going to build 12 such churches in the outskirts of the Russian Empire, which, however, do not have time. But in the village church Pohrebya on a special project to build a Russian imperial house was.
    Aleksievskaya church lasts for its intended purpose until 1944. During the Second World War the village was subjected to enhanced Cellar shelled and bombed from the air. The Church as the dominant vertical structure was subjected to particularly heavy fire for fear that it could be used to adjust the fire. Bell tower were demolished and the main dome, the walls posecheny shards on the walls facing the Dniester, not living space. The fighting died down many decades ago, but the church still stands with the terrible traces of that ancient war.