Ukraine

Lviv - Tysmenytsya

The church was consecrated in 1886 and dedicated to st. Kajetan. In the interwar period, the church was closed for 12 years. It was only when in 1936 Fr. Józef Depowski was in charge that both Armenian and Greek Rites were celebrated there. The last pastor, Fr. Jan Lechowski, left the parish in 1946 and went to Lower Silesia. Part of the equipment of the church in Tyśmienica with the image of St. Cajetan went to the church of St. Peter and Paul in Gdańsk. The plastered, brick church in Tyśmienica was a single-nave building with an elliptically closed presbytery and rooms for the sacristy and treasury, situated in the center of the town. The façade was flanked by two squat towers. There were five altars in the church, in the main one there was an image of St. Kajetan, who was represented in a silver dress, crowns and surrounded by numerous votive offerings. The church in Tyśmienica was demolished in the 1950s, and a building of the regional administration was built in its place.

Rivne - Berezne:

The parish of Saint Cajetan in Berezne founded in 1765, existed from 1618. The church itself was built in 1750. In 1938, the parish had 2,600 believers and the parish priest in the years 1938-1945 was Fr. Mieczysław Aleksander Rossowski who together with the last transport of parishioners on June 6, 1945, moved as a repatriate to the new borders of Poland. The church and chapel as well as the Catholic cemetery in Berezne were destroyed after 1945.