Zimna Wódka is a village in the Strzelce district, in the Ujazd municipality. From the south-western side, it is sheltered by a large forest complex. Currently, the village, together with two hamlets Buczki and Wesołów, is inhabited by over 300 people. The first mention of the town appears in the settlement of the Opole Duke Władysław of Opole with the Bishop of Wrocław Tomasz I, drawn up on November 30, 1260, in Sławięcice. The name derives from "cold water" ("zimna woda"), which is a stream flowing through the settlement. The existence of a parish in the village is attested by a source from the first half of the 14th century.
The showcase of the village is a wooden, Baroque branch church dedicated to St. Mary Magdalene from the mid-18th century. The church has historic furnishings in the form of a Baroque main altar and late Baroque side altars, with sculptures of holy figures. The Classicist pulpit comes from the first half of the 19th century.
North of the temple there is a Lourdes grotto, a chapel with a sculpture of St. John of Nepomuk, and a stone cross. The monuments of the village also include a mass grave of Silesian insurgents from 1921, located in the Roman Catholic cemetery.
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