History and curiosities of the village Wszewilki
near Milicz in south-western Poland
(bilingual: in English For English version click on this flag and Polish Dla polskiej wersji kliknij na ta flage)
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23 April 2007


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Welcome on the web page about history and curiosities of Wszewilki near the Lower-Silesian town of Milicz:
       We would probably consider to be a fable if anyone tells us about a place on Earth which is so extraordinary, that dreams come true in it - of course when these dreams meet specific conditions (e.g. are strong enough to be still remembered 50 years later). Or about the place which changes in the manner that this change represents a symbolic essence of everything that happens in the radius of tens of kilometres from it. Shockingly, such a place actually does exist. It is called Wszewilki. It is a village positioned around 1 kilometre as a "crow flies" in the direction of north-east from a small township Milicz in the south-western part of Poland. I was born in there. It caused that all my main and realistic dreams come true. Also all main and realistic dreams of other people that I know of, come true as well. At the first glance this place looks very "normal". But if one looks more thoroughly, then even this "normality" is extraordinary - this is because it results from the fact that this place symbolises the essence of everything that happens in the radius of tens of kilometres around it. And almost everything that happens in there currently, looks "normal".
       This ethnic web page presents the story of this extraordinary village Wszewilki, or more strictly, the story of a miniature section of it, which is historically the oldest one, and which presently is called with use of the double name "Wszewilki-Stawczyk" (in past it was called "Stawczyk", earlier "Wszewilki", before that "Cegielnia" - means "Brickwork", still even earlier "Neo-Steffitz", etc.).
* * *
       Let us now quote some data regarding Wszewilki. This village lies as "crow flies" (in a straight line) around 1 kilometre to north-east from a small Lower-Silesian town named Milicz. But between Milicz and Wszewilki there is the river called "Barycz" - visible on the satellite photo of Wszewilki indicated in the next paragraph. Thus, if someone intends to walk to this village from Milicz, he or she is forced to follow the round path, through the only road bridge located near Milicz. This makes him or her to walk around 3 kilometres. Wszewilki is an extremely old village. Probably it belongs to oldest out of all villages in Poland still in existence. In fact, this village is as old as the former wooden-castle of Milicz, while incomparably older than the present (stone-laid and walled) town of Milicz. As a farming-crafting colony of the wooden-castle from Milicz the village Wszewilki already existed a long time before the building of present (stone and brick) town of Milicz was started. (In turn the wooden-castle of Milicz probably is as old as the Polish town Biskupin, or Egyptian pyramids). Only that until around 1000 years ago, Wszewilki did not have their permanent inhabitants, but just temporary farming houses. This is because all people who worked then on fields from the area of present Wszewilki, until around 1000 years ago in evenings were returning to the relative safety of fortifications of Milicz, where they spend their nights. Wszewilki always was a village of free people. As such, this village always was more wealthy and better constructed from all other villages of given times. But since around 200 years ago, "evil UFOnauts" started to pick on Wszewilki, and for some reasons started to "sabotage" this village and its free people. This sabotage firstly caused, that in 1875 this extremely old village was cut in two halves through the very centre of it (i.e. through its former central "square") by railway line which leads from Milicz to Krotoszyn. In the result, the central square of this village, together with the old church and the hotel-pub, were transformed into a huge hole in the ground. Simultaneously a new road through the village was surveyed and build. This new road caused a gradual removal and destruction of all former buildings of Wszewilki. In turn these former buildings were extremely interesting and historically significant. It was so, because in the course of centuries, Wszewilki developed the own unique folkloristic architectural style. The style most probably was later copied by learned architects, and disseminated throughout the world, where presently it is known under the English name of the "tudor" architectural style - see Figure #8 from this web page. (In Poland this unique architectural style of Wszewilki is called with the popular name "mur pruski" - meaning the "Prussian Wall", as at the time when it got popular, Wszewilki belonged to Prussia.) Only that the honour of inventing this style is NOT attributed to Wszewilki. Some time later, by the road that leads to the old watermill on Barycz a new electrical mill was build. This new mill gradually deprived the old watermill all its clients. In this way, the old watermill, which supported Wszewilki for the last almost 1000 years, was pushed into a bankruptcy and then ruined. Even the name and the energy consistency of this village was then attacked. The steel railway line, according to claims of the Chinese "feng shui", cut and divide the natural flows of the "chi" energy through Wszewilki like a blade of knife. This blade cuts the old Wszewilki in two, subdividing it into two separate sub-villages. Thus everything that lies on both sides of this railway line, cannot be called now with the same name, but must use separate names. So starting from that time, administratively both sub-parts of the previous single village Wszewilki are considered in mutual separation, as entirely different villages which carry different names, the fate of which rolls along separate paths, etc. Both these parts presently are called "Wszewilki", and "Wszewilki-Stawczyk". For this reason, in the text below I use these two their official names, namely "Wszewilki" and "Wszewilki-Stawczyk". Unfortunately, this separate name for the oldest part of the village discussed here (i.e. for the present part "Wszewilki-Stawczyk"), somehow carries a bad luck. (After all, it symbolises everything that happens in the radius of tens of kilometres around this "Wszewilki-Stawczyk".) It simply refuses to stick to this village. (Is it possible that the fate asked it to wait with the definitive approval of this name, until it will be called with my own name, for example called "Pająkowo" - means "Pajakville"?) Since 1945 the name of this sub-village was already changed several times. Before and during the World War Two, it still belonged to Prussia (Germany) and was called with the German name "Neo-Steffitz" - means like a "new version of a nearby Steffitz" ("Steffitz" presently is called "Stawiec"), while the present "Wszewilki" were then called "Ziegelscheune", while present Milicz was called "Militsch" - for correct translations of these names see the web page genealogienetz.de. (But in fact, this supposed "Neo-Steffitz" is equally old as Milicz itself, means is the oldest village in the radius of tens of kilometres.) Then, immediately after the war, it was called "Cegielnia" (which in the Polish language means a "brick factory"). But when by accident trucks started to arrive to this villages, which were designated to collect bricks from the real brick factory located in a nearby Stawiec, then the name of this village was changed into Wszewilki. Under this name it existed until the end of time when I lived in it. Unfortunately, this also was not a good solution, as in the sense of flows of "chi" energy, it was a separate village, but the name of it coincided with the name of the adjusted village. Therefore, when in 1964 I shifted to Wrocław, the name of this mini-village was changed into "Stawczyk". But this caused another confusion, because instead to it, people who intended to visit it landed in a nearby village "Stawiec". Finally around 1985 someone drop into the idea to give to it a double, and thus rather inconvenient, name "Wszewilki-Stawczyk". Under this inconvenient double name it is officially known until today. But I would suggest to call it one day with the Polish name "Pająkowo" (to honour my Polish origin from this village), or with the English-based name "Pajakville" (to bridge my birth place with New Zealand, i.e. with the place which represents my later citizenship, tradition, and culture). After all, such a name would close all problems to-date. It would not only cut down the further confusion and perfectly harmonise with the name Wszewilki for the adjusted village, but would also provide the village with an unique allegoric significance.
* * *
       An exact map of Wszewilki and vicinity of this village can be seen e.g. on the web page with address www.mapapolski.pl/ (after clicking on the link calling this web page, one needs to type the name Wszewilki into the window "Miejscowość", and then click onto the button "Pokaż"). The black line indicates on this map the course of railway which in 1875 bulldogged through the miniature central square of Wszewilki. As one can see from this course, the railway runs onto Wszewilki from East, then - after tramping through the central place (square) of this village it runs again towards East. The same railway, as well as the empty area currently left after the former central place of this village, can also be viewed on the much more accurate satellite photograph of Wszewilki, available from the address http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=51.551406,17.286901&spn=0.026010,0.058545&t=k&hl=en. Over there also is clearly visible the course of the railway which was purposely bend towards the former central square of Wszewilki. Who was so hostile towards Wszewilki, that designed the route of this railway line so viciously? Notice also, that all fish ponds which are visible near Wszewilki, were formed only around 1990 (there were no such ponds over there when the railway line was constructed). The location of these ponds was also selected in such a sinister manner, that the ponds flooded, amongst others, the remains of 1000 years old watermill which for all these centuries operated near Wszewilki by the previous riverbed of the Barycz river.
* * *
       I was born and grown in the village "Wszewilki-Stawczyk" - as presently this village is officially called. I lived over there in years from 1946 to 1964. During this period of time I noticed and learned the most important facts reported on this web page. So all curiosities described on this web page originate from this small village. Similarly to my web pages about Milicz and Wrocław, this ethnic web page describes folklore stories about history and curiosities of the village Wszewilki-Stawczyk, means describes what people told in past in this village, or what they believed in. While presenting these folklore stories I do not try to verify here their authenticity, although when I know about evidence which supports the correctness of specific statements, then I indicate this evidence.
* * *
Please notice, that the village Wszewilki is an assembly area for a series of events which are coordinated via internet and which allow to visit this village each year. These coordinated by internet events are described on the web page Wszewilki-Milicz (available only in the Polish language). The next one amongst these events, a jamboree, is to take place on Saturday, 7th July 2007 (i.e. on 7/7/7). It is to be called "Wszewilki-2007". You are welcome to provide addresses of the web page "wszewilki_milicz.htm" to all these your friends or acquaintances, who could be interested in getting to know this extraordinary village.


#1. What we know about the history of village Wszewilki-Stawczyk:

       All started from the more intense traffic of merchants which the area of present Poland experienced after around 800 AD. Caravans of these merchants, following the so-called "Amber Route" used to stop for night in an old fortified town Milicz, presently known locally under the name "Chmielnik". Merchants from these caravans informed citizens of Milicz what happens in the far world. In turn some of their servants and labourers, who had the bed luck to get ill during the way, or become wounded during one of numerous then fights with bandits, stayed in Milicz for longer, or even for good. Of course, they did it only to temporary heal their wounds acquired on the way, or to heal their illness. But the fate likes to make surprises, and initially staying shortly in Milicz, some of them stayed finally for the rest of their lives. These incomers from overseas taught citizens of Milicz various crafts and skills which were already perfectly known in the south of Europe. To these new skills belonged, amongst others, a skill of building walled towns and a skill of building watermills.
       In the result of this influx of knowledge and skills, sometimes around 900 AD citizens of Milicz still then living in primitive wooden and straw fortifications, decided to build themselves a modern walled town with strong stony walls. After they completed this town, they shifted to it from the previously occupied wooden fortified settlement (currently called "Chmielnik"). For the building material used for this walled town they utilised the so-called "paddock ore" (in Polish called the "ruda darniowa") which was mined from the vicinity of the present dam shown on the photograph from Figure #2. This ore was shipped to Milicz on boats along the river Barycz. Buildings and walls constructed from it looked like the one shown in Figure #4. The area of the permanent housing of strong labourers who mined this "paddock ore" and shipped it to Milicz, provided beginnings for a permanent settlement, which presently is called the village of Wszewilki-Stawczyk (while above is called jocosely "Pająkowo" or Pajakville).
       The village called Wszewilki-Stawczyk, in fact is the same old as the settlement of Milicz. Presently it is several thousand years old. However, during the first relatively long period of time it took the form of temporary shelters for shepherds of cattle, which were build for times of bad weather. These shepherds permanently lived in fortified settlement of Milicz (i.e. in the fortified settlement "Chmielnik"). But everyday they travelled with their herds along the valley of Barycz river in search of the best pastures. Because of the security reasons, they could not depart from their settlement to distances that are too far for reaching them by vocal signals from the observation towers of their fortified settlement. Thus in fact the area which was the most distant from their settlement, and in which they still could graze their herds, were the surroundings of the present village of Wszewilki-Stawczyk. It was there that they constructed their temporary shelters, which protected them in days of a bad weather. Only around 900 AD, when Milicz needed intense labour to mine building materials for constructing houses and fortified walls of the town, these temporary shelters of shepherds were converted into a regular village. This village initially spread along the road from present Wszewilki towards the dam on Barycz shown in Figure #2. Immediately after the Second World War this road was incorrectly called the "road to the dam" (in fact this originally was the "road to the old watermill of Milicz"). This road existed until around 1990, leading from the village Wszewilki in the direction of the first dam on Barycz counting from the Milicz side. Presently only a small fraction of this road survived, which leaves Wszewilki-Stawczyk and leads to "nowhere".
       The most breakthrough time for crystallization of the present village Wszewilki-Stawczyk, was the construction of the watermill on the Barycz river. This watermill most probably worked already between years 900 and 1000 AD. So it was the oldest and the only watermill in the vicinity of Milicz, and also the oldest watermill in this area of Poland. It stood across the riverbed of Barycz in the place which lies only around 100 meters to the north from present dam on Barycz located nearest to Milicz. (Since around 1990 this location was flooded by a newly build fish pond, formed on the former historical location, in which previously present village Wszewilki-Stawczyk was born.) When I was a small boy, in this former location of the old watermill, one still could find foundations of the waterwheel and the water dam. Also still existed there remains of the channel and a pond in previous waterbed of the Barycz river, which channelled water to this waterwheel. Unfortunately, the waterwheel itself, and the buildings of the watermill, were not there anymore. But remains of wildered fruit trees still grew around this extremely old watermill of Wszewilki-Stawczyk. They grew on the sizable paddock-place, on which in past queues of horse wagons used to wait for their turn in milling the grains they carried, into flour. Furthermore, still "clay floors" existed (in Polish called "klepiska") which remained after several cottages occupied by peasant labourers working in this watermill. There was also a hill created artificially inside of the junction of both waterbeds of Barycz which spread from the pond in front of the waterwheel of this watermill. On the flat top of this hill the house of the mill owner was located in old days.
       The use of this watermill required the land transport of grains and flour. In turn the mill itself, and also people who travelled long distances to use it, needed various services and labours, and sometimes even night accommodation. In this manner on the area of present Wszewilki, or more strictly on the crossing of the main road which led to this mill from the villages Dziadków, Pomorsko, and Stawiec, with another road which led from Milicz to Sulmierzyce, with the elapse of time a sizable village was created. Slowly this village build a miniature central place with a hotel and pub, with a large bakery, and later even build its own church. This village gradually grew out from the crossing of these two main roads, which crossed each other in the shape of a cross where presently a huge hole in the ground is visible near railway in Wszewilki-Stawczyk. This present hole is there because, as described in further parts of this page, the public grounds of the village were used in 1875 for extracting sand and gravel for building the railway. Now the hole is overgrown with bushes.
       Independently from supply of flour and bread, with the elapse of time present Wszewilki-Stawczyk transformed itself also in a supplier of all products of everyday consumption for Milicz, such as milk, eggs, chicken, vegetables, etc. It can be stated, that the village called now "Wszewilki-Stawczyk", in fact firstly build Milicz, then defended Milicz from enemies, finally everyday fed citizens of Milicz. No wonder that the village and all its inhabitants constantly grew into wealth and significance. Because for a long time Milicz was the town which belonged to the bishop of Wroclaw, the village Wszewilki-Stawczyk - which was the feeder of Milicz, automatically was also under the protection and ownership of this bishop. This is the reason why Wszewilki never had its farm-station nor its "knight owner". Citizens of Wszewilki always remained free people which were affiliated with the bishop town of Milicz, and lived on almost the same rights and laws as inhabitants of this town. In the majority these citizens were of the Polish (Slavonic) origin.
       The lack of the owner for Wszewilki, in combination with Slavonic inclinations of its citizens, turned out to be fatal for the existence of it as a complete village. When around 1875 the Prussian authorities were building railway through Milicz, someone sinister intentionally so designed the path of this railway, that it cut through the miniature central place of Wszewilki and trotted the old Catholic church which stood by this place. Also everything that stood by this place, including into this an old hotel and pub of Wszewilki, and this Catholic church, was destroyed under the excuse of building the railway. Because the land of this central place was public, the company which build the railway begin to mine sand needed for the construction of the embankment of the railroad. In the result, in the area where in past the historic centre of Wszewilki was located with the miniature central place and with public buildings, around 1875 a huge hole in the ground was formed. This hole scares passers by until today, completely overgrown with bushes. Presently it can be seen in the central area of Wszewilki, i.e. on the crossroads of two main roads of this village, means in the place where the main road of the village is crossed by the dust road locally called the "road to the dam" (in Polish the "droga na tamę") - in fact this is the road to the old watermill of Wszewilki.
       Simultaneously with the construction of the railway through the central square of Wszewilki, i.e. around the year 1875, also the change of the route of the main road of this village was carried out. Previously a windy dirt road was leading through Wszewilki, which was running around 100 meters to the south from the present main road through this village. The old location of this original road until today is indicated by the location of a section of it, which even today is used in Wszewilki-Stawczyk. Soon after the Second World War, along this old road through Wszewilki still remains of old farm buildings were visible. They looked slightly strange, because they were placed in a row in the middle of fields in a distance of at least 100 meters to south from the present road and buildings of this village.
       Some time after the year 1900, in Wszewilki an electric mill was build. It was located near the new road through the village, or more strictly near a crossing with the old road that led to the old watermill on the Barycz river. Due to this competitive location it tempted all people travelling in the direction of the old watermill. Thus the new electrical mill gradually deprived clients of the old watermill. In the result, the old watermill fall into the disuse and soon was abandoned completely. In turn the collapse of it forced citizens of Milicz to build a new dam on Barycz, and to straighten-regulate the Barycz river. Simultaneously the village Wszewilki-Stawczyk lost its historic roots which grown from this old watermill on Barycz.
       Today Wszewilki-Stawczyk look as if this village never had its past. In turn it is known that "he who has no past has also no future". But is this a fact? After all, in reality this village in fact has its past, and the past is extremely constructive. Only that it takes publications like this web page to realise to everyone the existence of this past and the extraordinary moral significance of it.


#2. The watermill on the river Barycz which belonged to Wszewilki:

       When the construction works for the town Milicz were finally finished, the workforce and building materials mined in the vicinity of the "first dam" on the Barycz river (see photograph #2 below) stopped to be needed. So it rapidly turned out, that there is a whole village over there, full of unemployed, highly skilled workers. (This village represented the the pre-origin of what presently is the village Wszewilki-Stawczyk.) So in order to maintain somehow their significance and usefulness for the town Milicz, people populating this village build a first watermill on the Barycz river. This watermill was located only around 100 meters to the north from the present dam on the river Barycz, shown on Figure #2 below. Independently that this mill begin to provide Milicz with flour, while later also the bred from bakeries which grew up on this flour, the first citizens of Wszewilki-Stawczyk invented for it also an additional function. Namely water which was lifted up in front of the waterwheel of this watermill, was directed to a separate path. Thus, after being supplied to Milicz, this water formed the town's moat - means additionally it defended Milicz.
       In the period proceeding the construction of this watermill, and also soon after building it, the present village Wszewilki-Stawczyk was located around this watermill. But later it turned out that this location has disadvantages. Namely the area near the watermill was frequently flooded with spring floods. Therefore with the elapse of time the centre of village Wszewilki-Stawczyk was shifted to a higher ground, i.e. to a crossing of two roads described earlier (namely the crossing of a road that runs north-south, and that leads to this watermill, with the road which runs west-east, and which leads from Milicz to Sulmierzyce). At this crossing of roads a new centre of Wszewilki was build. This centre consisted of a miniature central square of the village, near which stood a hotel with a pub. Slightly later also a church was build with its own cemetery. Finally a bakery and grain storage was constructed. (Unfortunately, around 1875, as I described this in item #1 above, through this small square, where the church an hotel stood, a new railway line was build. In turn the central area of Wszewilki was then turned into a big hole in the ground, from which sand and gravel was mined to be used for construction of the railway line.)
       After the centre of Wszewilki-Stawczyk was shifted to a new, higher ground, near the watermill from Barycz were left to live only people deprived of their own land, means poor labourers, who directly worked in this watermill. Cottages of these labourers survived until after 1900s, when this watermill finally bankrupted and was abandoned. In times of my youth, i.e. in years between 1950s and 1960s, still one could find well visible hard cottage floors made of clay (in Polish "klepisko") from these cottages. I personally remember the existence and location of around 5 such well visible cottage floors. Two of these were located just behind a brick bridge over an irrigation ditch, which run along a border of old valley of Barycz. The sites of former locations of these cottage floors exist over there still until today, although the floors themselves were destroyed at the beginning of 1960s. Three further such well-preserved cottage floors from former houses of watermill labourers, existed by the road to this watermill, not far from the mill itself. In the present times locations of these floors are flooded by a large fish pond which was created around 1990. These "cottage clay floors" were actually evenly hardened layers of clay and sand, sometimes with an addition of calcium or cement. The rest of these cottages was constructed from fragile building materials - usually from branches, straws, and grass, which were covered with a layer of clay (i.e. exactly the same as I explained it in item #8 for an unique architectural style of Wszewilki), and then covered with a layer of forest ferns. After such cottages were abandoned or destroyed, the entire their upper part decayed and blended with the environment. Thus the only relatively permanent part was this evenly compressed "cottage floors" (i.e. "klepiska") on the ground. When as a teenager I analysed these "cottage floors", always I was puzzled by the smallness of the dwellings that people used for housing in past. These "cottage floors" had dimensions of only around 2.5 metre by 2.5 metre. This means that such cottages hardly sufficed for storing a single, small bed, small table, and perhaps one chair.
       The watermill on Barycz existed and operated for almost 1000 years. Of course, in the meantime it was repetitively extended, rebuild, and improved. The grain was delivered to it by water and by land. By land it was transported along two roads, namely the road from Wszewilki (immediately after the Second World War called the "road to the dam"), and still another road which approached it from another side of the Barycz river (means which led from villages Duchowo, Sławoszewice, and from the town of Milicz). Both these roads were linked together by a bridge over the Barycz river, which existed only several meters behind the waterwheel of this watermill. Because of this bridge, this old "road to the dam" in old times in fact was also one of the two main roads that linked Milicz with northern part of Poland. Simultaneously it was a part of the historic "Amber Route". Thus through Wszewilki caravans of merchants used to roll then, which travelled from Milicz, through villages Wszewilki and Pomorsko, further to Cieszków, Zduny, Krotoszyn, and then to Gniezno and later Gdańsk. In turn another road leaving Milicz towards north, run by what today represents the Krotoszyńska street of Milicz, but then it run through the centre of Stawiec, to Rawicz, and finally to Poznań. (The present asphalt road from Milicz to Cieszków and later to Krotoszyn, was constructed relatively late, because only around years 1930s.) The section of the road, which in these old times linked Milicz with the watermill on Barycz, is used until today. It is the access road from Milicz to the dam on Barycz. Also by this road soon after the Second World War several "cottage clay floors" (i.e. "klepisk") existed from old cottages, and even foundations of one larger building could be seen there.
       Only after the year 1900s a dangerous competition appeared to the watermill in Wszewilki. This competition was an electrical mill constructed by the side of road that led to the old watermill. Thus everyone who was going to the old watermill, usually gave up driving through the sandy road, and stopped by the new electric mill. In the result this modern competition from Wszewilki caused a gradual lost of all clients by the old watermill. This in turn eventuated in the bankruptcy and the ruin of the old watermill. Around 1950, only rotten fragments still were left from the old watermill. These could be noticed and identified only if someone knew that this was the location where previously a watermill used to stand.
       Until around 1800 this old watermill on the Barycz river was the only mill in the vicinity of Milicz. Its flour provided food not only for the town Milicz, but also for all surrounding villages. But after 1797, when the old fortified castle in Milicz was burned (for details see the web page about the town Milicz), and a new palace for the local margrave (margrabia) of Milicz was constructed, the section of the defence moat which stopped to be needed was so redirected, that it formed an ornamental river in the park by the palace. During redirecting of this town's moat, amongst others, another watermill was build on it. Thus, it was only then that the watermill from Wszewilki gained a first competitor in Milicz. Thus around 1800s the watermill lost its monopoly that lasted many centuries. Soon afterwards, also several villages near Milicz constructed their own windmills. Just after the Second World War such windmills still existed, although were not used, in villages Duchowo and Stawiec. (Soon after the Second World War, the village Stawiec had two such windmills, both located on the top of a hill around a half of kilometre to north from the waterworks in Wszewilki shown in Figure #9a.)
       It is not a coincidence that the "paddock ore" for construction of Milicz was mined in the vicinity of an area where a powerful "Earth chakra" is located. Also not by a coincidence the first old watermill from Milicz was placed exactly in the place where this chakra was bursting with the "chi" energy. Old Slavs were very sensitive to natural energies and perfectly knew about he influence that these energies exert on the fate of people and settlements. (This perhaps added the contribution to the fact that Milicz, which was constructed from the "paddock ore" mined from vicinity of this chakra, survived in a good condition until today, while a fortified castle of Milicz, which was constructed from bricks made in other places, i.e. in present Stawiec, was destroyed and burned many times in the meantime.) Readers, who wish to learn more about the "chi" energy can find scientific descriptions of this energy in the initial part of chapter H from volume 4 of monograph [1/4] available free of charge via "Menu 2" from this web page (click there on the link to monograph [1/4]). In turn a scientific explanation what actually is a "chakra", is presented in subsection I5.3 from volume 5 of monograph [1/4]. "Chakras" are also briefly described on a web page about the Concept of Dipolar Gravity.

Fig. #2

Fig. #2: The dam on the river Barycz located closest to Milicz. From the first ancestor of this dam, means from the very old watermill which belonged to Wszewilki, begins the rich history of this village and the economic link of it with the town of Milicz. Photograph taken in 2003. This is only around 100 meters towards north-east from the dam shown here, that already over 2000 years ago shepherds of cattle from the nearby fortified town Milicz started to build the first shelters against weather. Later evolution of these shelters led to the eventuation of the present village Wszewilki-Stawczyk. It is also near this dam that a powerful energy "chakra", which rules the fate of Milicz and the vicinity of it, is located. This chakra emits so powerful blow of natural energy by Chinese called "chi", that the influence of it can be felt even be people who are the most insensitive and thick skinned. (In order to feel the charging with energy and soothing influence of this flow of natural "chi" energy, it is enough to sit near this dam, cut off our thoughts from experiences induced by our senses, and concentrate our attention on our inner feelings - means, as this is called "switch on into the reception of the chi energy".) For example, it is just because of the flow of this "chi" energy, that even in times of my childhood, when no-one ever heard of such things as "chi" energy, "feng shui", natural "chakras" of Earth, meditations, etc., to the above dam crowds of people kept arriving only to - as then it was called "calm down their nerves" (today this would be called "meditation" or "saturating the body with chi energy"). Because just such location of the Milicz chakra of Earth, whatever happens in the vicinity of this dam, it is simultaneously the symbolic representation of whatever happens to the town of Milicz and to the vicinity of it. Because the flow of energy in this chakra is controlled by fate of the village Wszewilki-Stawczyk which historically originates from this chakra, whatever happens to this village, is simultaneously a symbolic representation of what later happens to Milicz and to the entire area spreading tens of kilometres around this town. The above dam is located only around 100 metres to the south from the area, in which between years 900 and 1000 AD was build the first watermill of the town Milicz. This watermill, and also the settlement of workers which build it, and workers who provide labour to it, in the course of time constituted the beginning to the old village presently known as Wszewilki-Stawczyk. In turn the flour from this watermill fed and nourished citizens of Milicz, and the vicinity of this town, for almost 1000 last years.
       The dam shown above was build by Polish youths called "Junaki" around 1950. Means that in time it was photographed it had already around 50 years. Because of the energy significance for Milicz, whatever happens around this dam, the current state of the dam, and also the vicinity of this dam, are symbolic representations of the state of things in Milicz and in vicinity of this township.
       Before the dam shown on the above photograph was constructed, an "old dam" existed in the same place. It was build by Germans soon after the year 1900. So at the time when it was exchanged for the dam shown on the above photo, this old dam also had around 50 years. But even this old German dam on the river Barycz, was NOT the first dam that existed in this place. This is because starting from around 900 to 1000 AD, around 100 meters to the left from the lens of the camera that took the above photograph, the first watermill on the river Barycz was build. In the administrative sense this watermill belonged to the village presently called "Wszewilki-Stawczyk". This watermill was the first structure which piled up the water of Barycz to the level close of the one which we can see on the above photograph as it is pilled up by the present dam. In fact this first watermill of Wszewilki-Stawczyk, was simultaneously the first dam on the river Barycz which was positioned just only around 100 meters to the north from the dam that we can see on the above photograph. Furthermore, this watermill split the river Barycz into two riverbeds, and redirected the water into two separate streams. The first of these riverbeds, i.e. the "low" one - means this one to which water was flowing from the watermill wheel, run towards Milicz approximately along the riverbed in which Barycz flows presently (although previously this riverbed was much more windy and complicated). This "low" riverbed merged with the present riverbed of Barycz only around 20 meters behind the person who took the above photograph. In turn another "high" riverbed of Barycz, which emerged from the pond in front of the waterwheel of that old watermill of Wszewilki, run along a prehistoric riverbed of Barycz, which presently is known in Milicz under the name of "młynówka" (in Polish meaning "the watermill stream"). On the above photograph this another ("piled up" or "high") riverbed of Barycz run along the line of trees visible behind the car on the right side of the photo, means in fact it crossed the present riverbed of Barycz exactly perpendicularly to the present course of this riverbed. (The present riverbed of Barycz, visible on the above photo, was dug up by hand during the straightening-regulation of the Barycz riverbed that took place already after 1900s). This old "high" riverbed of Barycz, means the "młynówka") in fact was supplying water to the moat in front of fortification walls of medieval Milicz. So it can be stated, that the watermill that for almost 1000 previous years stood only around 100 meters towards the north (left) from the area shown on the above photograph, not only fed the town Milicz, but also defended it against enemies. So from fate of it depended also the fate of Milicz - what resulted also from the location of it at the energy chakra of Milicz.
       The discussed here remains of the old watermill from Barycz, still existed not far from the dam illustrated above in times of my youth, i.e. in years 1950s to 1960s. Also wildered fruit trees which used to grow around this watermill still existed then. Only around 1990s the area of this old watermill was included into a newly formed fish pond and flooded with water. But even just shortly before flooding of this area, still one could clearly see the road which led to the watermill from Wszewilki. (Just after the Second World War this road was unjustifiably called the "road to the dam", although in the last section it turned towards the east - straight at the former building of the old watermill, in this way actually turning out from the dam instead leading to it.) Presently probably no visible remains are left from this old watermill - although I must admit that during my last visit in Milicz in July 2004 I was not inspecting this area - so I did not check how the matters look like over there. The only thing that possibly could still survive from this old watermill until present times, perhaps could be the artificial hill that was formed in the junction of both old riverbeds of Barycz. This is because the hill would stick above the water level in newly formed fish ponds. In old times the top of this hill was occupied by the house of the mill owner. (This house of the mill owner was located on the top of hill to be safe from high floods that during some springs used to trouble the Barycz valley. In turn the hill was located exactly at the junction between two riverbeds of Barycz that parted from each other from the pond that piled water up in front of the waterwheel.)
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#3. An old cemetery of Wszewilki:

       In the forest, around a half of kilometre to the north from "Wszewilki-Stawczyk", an old cemetery is located. It is shown on Figure #3 below. In times of my childhood we played frequently on it with other my colleagues. Thus I remember, that the oldest graves which then we seek purposely by reading dates on their inscriptions, were dated still in years 1700s. (Interestingly, a large proportion of these old graves used to have Polish, means Slavonic, names.)
       But I am absolutely certain, that this cemetery is incomparably older than years 1700s. In fact, my opinion is that it was a place of cult and burial still in the pagan times. There was for this a body of evidence, e.g. very old graves without inscriptions, still made from lumps of "paddock ore". One of the evidence for the untypical age of this cemetery was an old oak which used to grow almost at the centre of this cemetery until the beginning of 1990s. This oak was so huge, while the cavity (in Polish called "dziupla") contained in the trunk was so voluminous, that on the basis of comparison of it with the oak which is a "monument of the nature" (i.e. the "Pomnik Przyrody" in Polish) and which grows in Kadyny near Elblag by the Wisła (Vistula) Spit, in northern Poland (see Figure #3b), I estimate the age of this oak from Wszewilki-Stawczyk at not less than 700 years. (In my opinion, in times of my youth it was the oldest oak in the entire vicinity of Milicz, and in fact it deserved to be announced a "monument of the nature" and surrounded with a greatest care.) But what was the most interesting about this old oak from Wszewilki, is that it grew "sideways", not "upwards". I understand by this, that instead building the height, this oak was building the thickness and the span of its branches that grew to sides of it. In turn it is known well, that just such a growth of an oak certifies that in times of its youth, when it directed its growth, it used to be the only tree that grew in this part of the forest near Wszewilki. This in turn means, that when this oak was planted at least 700 years ago, meaning before-medieval times, the area of this cemetery from Wszewilki was already something special. After all, it was located in the middle of forest, but it was deprived trees - apart from this single oak. In turn it is known, that for Slavs from before Christian times, oaks were symbols of strength and longevity, usually also a house for the god "Pierun" (meaning "Lightning bolt") described in item #23 below, means were "pagan holy trees" with functions similar to famous "Datuk" trees from present Malaysia. (For more details about holy trees "Datuk" see descriptions under photograph 6 from the web page ufonauci.w.interia.pl, or see descriptions in subsection I6.1 from volume 5 of monograph [1/4] downloadable free of charge from this web page). Anyway, there are numerous premises, that similarly like these Malaysian holy "Datuk" trees, also "pagan holy oak" from Wszewilki in past had supernatural powers. After all, in times of my youth this old cemetery in Wszewilki was famous in the entire vicinity from various unexplained and "supernatural" events and phenomena, which could originate from the powers of this oak. Furthermore, on the basis of experience from my own youth, I personally believe, that this particular oak had the ability for telepathic communication with people, as this is described in subsections I5.4 and I3.3.1 of the above mentioned monograph [1/4]. What is even more interesting, this "pagan holy oak" from an old cemetery in Wszewilki grew almost precisely in the middle of the cemetery, although it was shifted from this centre towards the north by around one diameter of itself. This in turn means, that probably it was intentionally planted in there by people just on the side of a stump from an even older oak, which most clearly was occupying the exact centre of this old cemetery. Means that the oak that after 1991 collapsed because of the old age, after it survived in my estimation around 700 to 1000 years, in fact replaced an even older oak which most probably grew before it in the exact centre of this cemetery, and which most probably also collapsed because of an old age after it lived for around further 700 to 1000 years. But if one leads this deduction even further, than it turns out, that this older oak, planted by pagan Slavs at least 1400 years ago, was not at all the first oak that grew in this place. After all, the logics indicates that in order to be planted in the exact centre of this cemetery, the entire area of this cemetery needed to be free from other trees, so that the sight of planting people could find out where exactly this centre of the cemetery is. In turn to remove all trees from the entire hill of this cemetery, local Slavs needed to already have there some naturally growing oak, whom they worshiped then. This first oak from this hill, possibly growing completely accidentally, probably also collapsed because of an old age, after it lived for around 700 to 1000 years. So if the above deduction is true, than all evidence indicates, that the cemetery in Wszewilki began to be a place of old pagan cult and burials around 2100 and 3000 years ago. Because this is the closest and almost only such area lying not far from the former town Milicz, one may deduce that the place, which presently we call a "German cemetery" from Wszewilki, in fact is a place of an old Slavonic cult for inhabitants of Milicz, starting from pagan times, when the Europe was still belonging to the Roman Empire. Personally I am convinced, that this unique place was devoted to the cult of Slavonic god "Pierun" (i.e. "Lightning bolt"), mentioned also in item #23 below.
       Of course, at this point someone could ask, whether this oak which disintegrated after 1990 is the only evidence of the old age of this cemetery. The reply is "no". There were in past various other items of evidence which I still remember. For example, in times of my youth there were several very old and non-typically looking graves not far from this oak. They were formed from lumps of "paddock ore" and were deprived of any inscriptions. In turn the use of paddock ore for the building material of these non-typical graves means, that they remained from times when near Milicz there was no a brickwork, nor mason workshops, means from times before 14th century. Summarising the above, all signs indicate that an old cemetery in Wszewilki, wrongly called the "German cemetery", is in fact an old "time capsule", which hides inside many historic treasures which still await their discoverers.
       For the much older age of this cemetery certifies also a very old road which in past led straight like a bullet from this ancient oak from the centre of the cemetery, to the main doors from a former church that existed by the miniature central square of Wszewilki (this church is described in item #5 of this web page). Although at present this road probably is not going to be clearly visible, it existed for sure. The remains of it were still clearly visible in times of my youth. On the side of it several old oaks used to grow. If these oaks are allowed to live until today, they would have at least 300 years by now. One oak by this old road survived until the time of my youth (from the rest only stumps were then left behind). It used to grow slightly in front of the edge of present forest, only around 40 meters towards north from former main doors to the church in Wszewilki (i.e. to east from present fire basin that was build on the place of former house of the pub owner from Wszewilki) - perhaps this oak grows over there until today. It is very intriguing to what festivities this old road was used. If it was a cemetery road (i.e. the road used for transporting bodies from the church to the cemetery in Wszewilki), then the age of these oaks would indicate, that the Slavonic cemetery from Wszewilki was used much earlier that it is commonly believed. With this old road which linked the church and cemetery in Wszewilki a curiosity told by old locals is connected. Namely, several meters to the east from this road supposedly there is a small underground tunnel which linked cellars of the church, with a grave chamber on the cemetery. This tunnel supposed to be so small, that people needed to walk in it on four (i.e. on hands and legs). The description of it is also provided on a separate web page about the church of St. Andrea Bobola.

Fig. #3a

Fig. #3a: An old cemetery of Wszewilki-Stawczyk. This cemetery has an extraordinary configuration of the ground. It is shaped like a "grave of a human giant", i.e. it takes a shape of an elongated and highly symmetrical hill in the shape of a huge old grave. What is even more extraordinary, this highly symmetrical and regular hill is surrounded with a completely flat land. No wonder, that from the oldest times it probably attracted attention of local people. So it is almost absolutely sure, that already in pagan times, it was a place of a pagan cult and a burial place for ancient Slavs. For just such a function of a "place of a pagan cult" certify the presence in almost a geometrical centre of it an old "holy oak", which in pagan times fulfilled the same function as presently perform churches and temples. Furthermore, many other attributes of this cemetery also certifies, that in fact it is at least as old as Wszewilki-Stawczyk, means that for local Slavs it was a place of ancient cult and a burial place a long time before Christianity. As such, this cemetery is a closed "time capsule" which still awaits for the opening.
       The above photograph was taken in July 2004 from a side of the road which in past led from Pomorsko and Stawiec, and before that from Dziadkowo and Cieszków, via Wszewilki-Stawczyk to the old watermill on Barycz. The camera lens was directed towards north-east. In the area visible on foreground, still after the war a brick mortuary used to stand (presently only bushes grow over there). More inside there was an old oak with a huge cavity inside, which after 1990 either collapsed by itself, or was hit by a lightning. The extraordinary attribute of this oak was, that it had telepathic abilities of some sort, similar to these which have famous holy trees "Datuk" from Malaysia. When as children we used to play in branches of this old oak, we always were telling to each other, that in the huge cavity of it filled with wood powder, an old treasure is hidden. In fact, when after 1990 this oak collapsed because of an old age, while the entire cavity of it was uncovered, some accidental passer by found a rich treasure hidden in it. (The whispered rumours about this treasure are now a public secret of Wszewilki and the vicinity.)
       From times of my youth I remember that oldest graves of this cemetery with still readable inscriptions originated from 1700s. In turn last people were officially buried on it in 1945.
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       To the right from the area shown on this photo a row of graves used to be located in past, about which people used to say that they hosted victims of suicides. With these graves was connected a story, which in times of my youth was attributed to this particular cemetery from Wszewilki, and to these graves of victims of suicides, while in later times which I heard several times as unconnected anymore to any specific cemetery nor location. According to this story, still before the First World War, in Wszewilki supposed to live a hooligan and a Casanova known widely around. He supposedly was very powerful and claimed that he is not afraid of anything, even the devil himself. During one of drinking sessions he supposed to make a bet with his colleagues, that he is not afraid to go to this cemetery from Wszewilki in the middle of night. (This cemetery was known around in past as a place where was very "spooky" - what not supposed to surprise, as it was a place of the pagan cult and burials since ancient times). In order to prove that he in fact was on the cemetery, colleagues gave him a pole which they marked, and which he supposed to push in one of the graves. After he went to the cemetery, this hooligan and Casanova would not return. So immediately as a daylight arrived, his colleagues run to the cemetery. They found him dead on the grave of one of these victims of suicides. His pole pushed into the grave by "accident" was pinning his coat to this grave. Then the death of this fearless fighter was explained as a heart attack from a fear. When he pushed the pole and intended to return to his colleagues, something hold him down to the ground. Without being able to see in darkness what it was, and being afraid the worst, he experienced a heart attack. Older people used to show his grave on this cemetery from Wszewilki, which supposed to be the first grave in the row of victims of suicides - lying just by the side of the grave on which he died. The morale which then was repeated after finishing this story went on that there are no strong nor fearless, when comes to laws of the other world. Although the action of these laws is camouflaged and can be explained on many different ways, in the final effect always it turns out, that these laws exist and act with an iron hand.

Fig. #3b

Fig. #3b: An old oak from the settlement Kadyny at the Vistula Spit (near Elbląg). This oak is estimated at not younger than 700 years, however most probably have 1000 years. It is called the "Dąb im. Jana Bażyńskiego" (i.e. the "Oak of the name of Jan Bażyński") and is protected by the Polish law as an official Monument of Nature. I show it here because the cross-section of this oak is approximately similar to the cross-section of the trunk of the old oak that used to grow on the cemetery from Wszewilki. Only that branches of the oak from Wszewilki grew "sideways", while branches of this oak from Kadyny grow "upwards". In spite that this oak from Wszewilki was a similar age, i.e. also had around 700 to 1000 years, and in spite that without any doubt it was connected with Slavonic pagan celebrations from this area, no-one cared to announce it to be a Monument of Nature, but allowed it to die from an old age and from a lack of human care.


#4. Secrets of the paddock ore from Wszewilki:

       Where the "paddock ore" come from to Wszewilki? This supposedly simple question turns out to be very difficult to answer. If someone asks about it any scientists, e.g. geologists, then these scientists hide behind theories difficult for verification their inability to provide an explanation. For example, they may say that there are bacteria which extract iron from water, and that this iron drops down to the bottom of standing water and then coagulates, etc. But in reality none of the presently existing scientific explanations for the origin of large regular lumps of paddock ore present in the vicinity of Wszewilki makes logical sense, nor can be confirmed experimentally. Also absolutely none of these explanations justifies why the ore has attributes which it actually has. For example, consider such a matter as why this ore is compresses into just so permanent lumps, that these lumps can be used for building of strong walls? Or why it has a porous consistency? Or why the composition and consistency of it are so uniform? So let us look the truth into eyes. The explanations for the origin of the paddock ore, which are provided by present academic textbooks, are only smoke screen which masks the present lack of a detailed knowledge on this subject. In fact the present reply to the question "where the paddock ore that existed in Wszewilki originates from" or "where such ore existing in any other area originates from" still reads "in reality current human science has no a slightest clue"!
       Unfortunately, the truth is such, that presently we do not have a consistent scientific theory, which would explain in a satisfying manner at least the following facts:
1. Origin. How the paddock ore eventuated or found itself in the vicinity of Wszewilki? After all, only around 12.5 thousand years ago this area was covered by a moving glacier. Thus the ore was deposited at the time, or after, this glacier withdrew. Thus, in geological terms this ore had a very short time to form.
2. Form. Why the deposits of this ore do not have the shape of e.g. dust, but the form of individual, irregular lumps which lie in a single layer spread under the surface of paddocks (as an opposite to e.g. a vertical distribution of these lumps, one above the others)?
3. Attributes. How to explain all attributes of this ore, e.g. the strength of it, consistent porous structure, uniformity of the composition, etc.
4. Uniqueness. How to explain the fact that the "paddock ore" doe NOT appear in every place on Earth where there is water rich in iron and bacteria. For example, this ore can be found almost exclusively in Poland (or more strictly - mainly in a relatively short distance from Milicz and Sulmierzyce), with only small amounts present also in Austria and England. But it is lacking in both Americas, in Asia, Australia, and New Zealand, in spite that there is a lot of water rich in iron over there and that there is a lot of various bacteria over there.
       Therefore herewith I would like to announce an appeal to readers of this page. Namely, I would like to appeal that they try to develop their own scientific theory which in one go would provide replies to all above problems with the paddock ore. The development of just such a theory would represent an exciting research project for young seekers of mysteries.
       In order to give here an idea about a kind of the theory which we are seeking, I should explain that myself I tend to adhere to the view, that the paddock ore from Milicz in fact represents remains and debris from a huge metal comet, which in times of ice age fallen down onto the surface of the moving glacier which at that time covered the present territory of Milicz and the vicinity of this town. Such a "comet theory" explains many attributes of the paddock ore from Milicz, which are NOT explainable on the basis of present scientific explanation based on the action of "bacteria". For example, it explains (1) where this paddock ore arrived to Wszewilki (well, it fallen from the heaven above, in form of loose lumps of cosmic material which constituted a huge iron comet). It explains (2) why this ore does not take the form of dust (well, the comet was mainly a solid object). It explains also (3) many attributes of this ore (e.g. it is porous, because the huge amounts of heat generated during the fall caused that it boiled in the entire volume, etc.). It also explains (4) why it does not appear in other continents (well, the main part of this comet fall onto the surface of the glacier that in the ice age lied in the vicinity of Milicz, thus during the melting of this glacier debris of the comet were washed with streams of water almost exclusively to the after-glacial riverbeds and lakes which later appeared in the area where it has fallen). In addition it explains (5) why small amounts of this ore appear also in Austria and England (well, the comet split during the fall down into several large pieces, the largest of which hit not far from Milicz, while several smaller ones hit the glacier in other areas of the present Europe - similarly like during the catastrophe of the space shuttle "Columbia" the initially solid corpse of this shuttle also disintegrated along over a thousand kilometres of the USA surface). Unfortunately, living permanently in New Zealand, I have no opportunity to check, through my research on the spot, how much the above my theory is true. So I invite all readers to verify all "pro" and "contra" of this "comet theory for the origin of the paddock ore from the vicinity of Milicz and Wszewilki", on the evidence present in the vicinity of Milicz, and then to discuss this verification with me. I also invite readers to present their own theories concerning the same matter.

Fig. #4

Fig. #4: The wall constructed from the "paddock ore". The above is all what remained until today from the former medieval fortification walls of the town Milicz. (Only that these walls in past stood in different locations than the above monument. However, the building material from the above monument in fact originates from old fortification walls of Milicz.) The fortification walls of medieval Milicz were build from lumps of local "paddock ore", which in past was mined from paddocks and fields located near the present village "Wszewilki-Stawczyk". In turn the lion visible on the top of the stand constructed from lumps of paddock ore, is the same lion which used to decorate in old times the top of the southern gate in the medieval fortification walls of Milicz. (This medieval gate used to be called the "Wrocław Gate", as the road through it led to the city Wrocław. Originally this gate was located near the place in which presently there is a small bridge through the "młynówka" (i.e. through the "watermill stream") on the southern junction of both streets which come out from the central place of Milicz.) The above photograph was taken in July 2004. For more data about old fortification walls of Milicz, see item 27 and photograph 27 (b) from the web page Milicz available through "Menu 1".
       At this point it is worth to emphasize, that in the initial stage of the construction of the town Milicz, until around 14th century, the paddock ore originating from the vicinity of Wszewilki was used as a basic building material which substituted the present bricks and concrete that then was lacking in Milicz. Former people simply cut with steel saws large lumps of this ore into regular cubes, and used these cubes for building. An example of the form constructed in this manner which remained until today, is the remainder of the Milicz defence walls shown in Figure #4 above.
       Unfortunately the "paddock ore" belongs to so-called "cold" building materials. After all, it conducts heat much better than bricks. Thus houses build from this ore are more difficult to heat than houses build e.g. from bricks. Therefore, it was used for building only until the time when bricks become readily available. Then the use of it was abandoned, unless there was an important reason for this use - e.g. the need to preserve remains of the town defence walls, as this was the case with the building of the ornamental gate to the palace of margrave, the remains of which are shown on the above Figure #4.


#5. Conspiracy against Wszewilki:

       Although at this stage this can be difficult to understand and to accept, it appears that there is a kind of devilish conspiracy against Wszewilki. This conspiracy is implemented by the same dark power, which constantly sabotages the totaliztic web pages about Wszewilki, and which uses various "tricks" to hold back people from reading these web pages. This dark power clearly tries to destroy all sources of information about the immensely constructive history and moral past of Wszewilki. The extraordinary in all this is that the evil creatures which persecute an innocent village of Wszewilki, are the same creatures which in medieval times were called "devils", while in present times are named "UFOnauts". I personally wonder constantly and cannot understand, why and in what way the village Wszewilki get in trouble with UFOnauts.
       If one analyses the historic fate of Wszewilki, then a clear pattern hits eyes which seems to constantly persecute this village. In general, this pattern manifests itself in form of various supposed "coincidences" which systematically destroy all sources of historic information about the morally constructive past of Wszewilki. In turn, as I described this in chapter VB from volume 17 of monograph [1/4], just such a pattern of someone's persecution is characteristic for "falling into disfavour" of the UFOnauts who dramatically exceed people in technology and in intelligence. For example, in my opinion it is not an accident, that a small central square of historic Wszewilki, was in past completely erased from the map, by a railway line which bulldogged everything on its path. If someone analyses on the map the course of this railway line, it turns out that someone intentionally deformed this course, so that the railway bulldogged through the central square of old Wszewilki, and destroyed an old Catholic church together with various other buildings that used to stand there. If not this purposeful and forced deviation from the straight path of this railway line, this line would in fact run beyond Wszewilki, some half a kilometre to east from the village. This deviation has in turn such a consequence, that the historic central square of Wszewilki together with its old church and with other public buildings, could NOT survive until today. All these buildings from Wszewilki were made of lumps of the same paddock ore, from which old defence walls and old buildings of Milicz were constructed. Someone make sure though, that the railway line bulldogged through the very centre of the village, thus destroying the historic roots of Wszewilki. In my opinion, it is not an accident also, that the area of the "chi" energy chakra near an old watermill on Barycz, in which the present village of Wszewilki was born, currently is flooded by a newly build fish pond. Not mentioning here the state of the area of an old Slavonic cult (i.e. the old cemetery from Wszewilki), which presently is a kind of "taboo" for descendants of the same Slavs who in this place were completing their pagan rituals. In my personal opinion, in spite that the destruction of sources of information about the history of Wszewilki apparently is caused by a string of "coincidences", there is a strange regularity in these supposed coincidences. This regularity suggests, that in reality it is an evil power which designs and which determines what and how supposed to happen in order to systematically destroy the traces of history of Wszewilki, and only then this destruction is carried out in such a manner that it appears to be "coincidences, or outcomes of unfortunate sets of circumstances".
       The extraordinary thing about Wszewilki is, that by a convergence of fortunate "coincidences" it was possible to identify and to describe for this village the evidence, that UFOnauts constantly destroy knowledge about the history of this village. What is even more interesting, even today the reader is still able to verify this evidence in person, because until today perfectly visible traces of this evidence remain in Wszewilki. Fort example, the reader can trace on the map, the viciously deviated course of the railway line which bulldogged the miniature central square of Wszewilki. The reader can also drive onto the spot, and with his or her own eyes see holes dug out in places where the church, the hotel and the pub, and also other public buildings from the miniature square of Wszewilki used to stand in past. He or she can also talk to older locals, who still may remember the remains of an old watermill on Barycz (i.e. remember remains of both riverbeds of the Barycz river, which parted from the watermill pond, means the high and the low riverbed, remember remains of the waterwheel and dam, remember the hill on which the house of the mill owner was located, and remember fruit trees which in past used to grow around the watermill). He or she can also check the course of old roads through this village before the newly designed roads destroyed the original buildings, etc., etc. In turn by realising the evil process of hiding the past, which UFOnauts implemented in Wszewilki, the reader may start to have an understanding what kind of process of hiding the history of humanity is continually carried out on Earth by these sworn enemies of humanity. This should allow to understand how little humanity actually knows about its true history, about the origin and significance e.g. pyramids and other old structures researched and described e.g. by Erich von Däniken, about strange remains which until today are left from the previous technical civilisation on Earth destroyed completely by UFOnauts around 12500 years ago, about Atlantis, about the true origin of humanity, etc., etc.
       There is a lot of facts which confirm that the village Wszewilki somehow "fall into disfavour" of UFOnauts, and that these UFOnauts with their cunning manipulations continually keep destroying the sources of information about the past of Wszewilki. Here are most important out of these facts:
       1. Continuous inducing in Wszewilki various events that destroy sources of information about the peaceful, free, constructive, and moral past of this village. Examples of such events include: (a) such a design of the path of the railway line described before, that this railway bulldogged through a historic central square of old Wszewilki, (b) the destruction and complete removal (together with foundations and cellars) of the historic Catholic church and old pub-hotel, which used to stand on peripherals of this old central square of Wszewilki, (c) the design of a new path for the main road through this village after 1875, that forced the gradual destruction of all old farm buildings that used to exist along the old road of the village, (d) the formation of a large fish pond around 1990, that flooded areas from which Wszewilki originated and flooded remains of an old and historically first watermill on Barycz near Wszewilki, (e) the devastation of an old Slavonic cemetery in Wszewilki.
       How viciously was designed the railway line which bulldogged a miniature central square of Wszewilki, it can be see on a map which is available through the web page www.milicz.pl/turystyka/mapa/ (after clicking on the link which calls this map, the settlement Wszewilki needs to be selected from the window "Mapa" - and only then the map of vicinity of Wszewilki will show). On this map one can see how maliciously is deviated the path of the railway line, which in 1875 was intentionally designed to bulldogger the miniature central square of Wszewilki. It takes a lot of evil intentions to destroy without reasons an entire historic centre of this village. Around 120 years later, means around the year 1990, huge fish ponds were formed near Wszewilki, which destroyed the last object from the past, means the remains of 1000 years old watermill from Barycz. (And we must remember that on foundations of this watermill the historic village Wszewilki grew up.) In this manner the entire our knowledge about highly moral past of Wszewilki was deleted, which (the knowledge) explained an extraordinary karma accumulated by this unique settlement.
       2. The highly selective causing of rapid deaths of practically all "autochthons" who after the war remained in Wszewilki and who could pass to others the knowledge about the history of this village. (These "autochthons" are simply Poles who used to live in this area before the World War Two, and who remained in the area after Germans escaped in front of the attacking Russian army.) The first of these "autochthons", the woman who lived approximately in the middle of length of Wszewilki, was shot by Russian soldiers already in day of "the battle for Milicz". Next four "autochthons" were murdered in their homes in times of chaos and lawlessness which prevailed immediately after the war, while their bodies were burned together with their houses. The last, sixth "autochthon" from Wszewilki, someone named Waloha (whom I knew, and remember until today), some time after the war unexpectedly "broke his neck" while riding his bicycle along the asphalted, and thus even like a table, highway through a nearby Stawiec. Road accidents happens and probably it would not be anything suspicious in his accident, if not the exact place where it took place. I inspected this place and I was surprised to notice, that the poor Waloha supposedly "break his neck" falling down from the side of the road, which "towered" only around one metre above the level of the surrounding field (there was no ditch in this place). In turn I remember, that myself I somersaulted together with my bicycle from the railway embankment near the bridge on the Barycz river (i.e. almost 10 meters high) and only got slight scratches on my skin.
       3. The destruction of written archives of Wszewilki. All archives that were written about the village of Wszewilki were destroyed in the process of finishing the Second World War. But interestingly, apart from these archives, practically almost nothing else was destroyed.
       4. The psychosis of devastation of everything that has a historical value. In my travels overseas I have not met any place on Earth so far, in which the continual destruction of everything that has a historic value would be carried out with such an enthusiasm as this is done on Wszewilki and in Milicz. In fact other places in the world surround their history and antiques with a huge care. For example in New Zealand even small settlements (below 1000 inhabitants - means of the size of present Wszewilki) have their own museums, sometime equipped equally rich in exhibits, as museums in Warszawa or Wrocław. Also every building which is over 100 years old, in New Zealand becomes a historic treasure and is protected by the law. (Of course, Wszewilki not only that do not have a museum, but even would consider a crazy idea any suggestion of having one. Also every older building is systematically destroyed in Wszewilki. In turn Milicz, in spite of its around 30 000 inhabitants, so far managed to afford only a poor "Regional Room" - i.e. "Izbę Regionalną", which practically has almost no historic exhibits, apart from several paper banners.) Only at this web page, and on the web page about the town of Milicz, is described how in the village of Wszewilki and the town of Milicz, after the Second World War devastated were intentionally, or nothing was done in order to prevent a devastation, the following heritage objects of a huge historic value: (1) an ancient oak from Wszewilki, which most probably was an object of Slavonic worship, and which - because of the age and significance, deserved to be a "Monument of Nature", (2) an old post-Slavonic cemetery from Wszewilki, (3) the remains of historically important watermill from Wszewilki which was around 1000 years old, and which existed near the current dam on Barycz, (4) the clay floors ("klepiska") from old cottages that used to exist along the road to the old watermill on Barycz, (5) very old farm buildings which existed in Wszewilki and which displayed the local architectural style that most probably provided an inspiration for the world's architectural style presently called "tudor" (po polsku "mur pruski"), (6) historic windmills from Stawiec and Duchowo (which existed until around 1960s), (7) the ornamental entry gate to the palace of margrave of Milicz, which (the gate) contained the building material inside which originated from remains of medieval fortification walls of Milicz, (8) the "angel stone" from the church of St. Anna, which carried in itself a huge folkloristic and historic value, (9) at least medieval (if not older) graves constructed from paddock ore which were discovered accidentally by the church of St. Andrea Bobola (i.e. "Św. Andrzeja Boboli") in Milicz, (10) the grave of margrave near the palace in Milicz, (11) old graves near the wooden church in Trzebicko, (12) underground tunnels under Milicz, (13) old waterworks from Milicz together with their highly valuable historical gas engines and pumps, (14) richly supplied in exhibits small museum from the Primary School No 1 in Milicz, and several others. This list contains only these objects of heritage and "antics" about which I know in far New Zealand. But how many further items of heritage and antics were destroyed in Wszewilki and in Milicz in such a manner that I do not learned about them. In my opinion, such psychosis of destruction is NOT a normal behaviour, but it needed to be imposed with methods of post-hypnotic and telepathic suggestions to inhabitants of Milicz and Wszewilki. After all, every inhabitant of Milicz and Wszewilki is systematically being abducted to a UFO deck - one can easily verify these abductions because every inhabitant of these places have a special scar on the leg which was created by UFOnauts after implanting to the shin bone an identification implant described in subsection U3.1 from volume 15 of monograph [1/4] (the photograph of this unique scar from leg is shown in the first photograph from the web page totalizm.pl/ufo.htm). So it is almost sure, that during these abductions UFOnauts program hypnotically the inhabitants of Milicz and Wszewilki into some kind of a powerful skirmish and averse towards everything that is old and historic. (This hypnotic programming could be checked and confirmed through research of reactions of inhabitants of Milicz and Wszewilki to the sight of any antiques or old buildings.)
       6. "Prince and beggar" - means a shocking inequality in treatment of two parts of historically the same village. Still another evidence for the secretive persecution of Wszewilki-Stawczyk, which continues until today, is the huge inequality and injustice with which two parts, that in past used to constitute a single village, are treated today. These two parts include the present Wszewilki, and the present Wszewilki-Stawczyk. In past they used to be a single village. Only the construction of the railway line and the destruction of the historic central square of Wszewilki subdivided these into two separate villages. The inequality of this treatment hits everyone's eyes when someone walks along these villages. When walking along the village Wszewilki, means through the one closer to Milicz out of these two villages, the walker sees a perfect road, the presence of a footpath, water supply, canalization, tide roadsides, clear road signs, etc., etc. Means Wszewilki until today are treated like a "prince". But walking slightly further, one reaches Wszewilki-Stawczyk, which is this historically persecuted part, in which moral totalizm was born. Here everything rapidly changes. The footpath disappears, three main roads by which houses of Wszewilki-Stawczyk are located still remain dirt roads without footpaths, everywhere are holes covered with wild bushes, water supply is not visible, road markings become unreadable and neglected, etc., etc. In other words, this part of the village is treated like a "beggar". And the only "crime" that it committed is that unwillingly it tramped over the toes of powerful UFOnauts who currently occupy our planet!
       7. Electoral blockade of the candidate who introduced a potential to improve the situation of Wszewilki. On Sunday, 12 November 2006 the election took place in Poland for self-governing local bodies. It turned out then, that the only place in entire Poland, where "by a coincidence" devils used their tails to steer things up, was Milicz. In turn Wszewilki administratively belong to Milicz. For example, on the day of election it turned out that voting cards were wrongly printed. What even more meaningful, the candidate who was missed out on these cards was carrying the same name, on the sound of which UFOnauts bite out their tails in fury. Because of the traditions which this candidate represented, if he was elected he for sure would break the to-date string of persecution and bad treatment which Wszewilki receives. Thus, the evil powers which visibly persecute Wszewilki until today, have made sure that this candidate has not got a chance to be elected.
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       So far I have not met in the world any other village, the history of which someone would destroy and persecute for equally long period of time, and equally viciously and cunningly, as UFOnauts destroy and persecute the sources of information on the past of Wszewilki-Stawczyk and also the development and progress of this village. Because these cosmic bandits would not carry out continually for over 120 years acts of vandalism on the village which would not mean to play some extremely significant historic role, it is obvious that Wszewilki somehow will get behind the skin of UFOnauts. This in turn induces the question, what so important supposed to happen in Wszewilki, that UFOnauts so panicky are afraid of it, and that they so pushily try to remove from it historic and moral foundations. From the time of starting this "conspiracy of UFOnauts against Wszewilki" around 1875, practically nothing historically vital happened in this village. So most clearly all this supposed to happen in the future. So what it supposed to be? I personally believe, that it is somehow connected to the moral and peaceful karma of Wszewilki. Wszewilki is one of sparse villages, which was free for practically all these centuries, which was feeding, building, and defending, which inspired others, and which provided a shelter for good and for morality. So it is almost sure, that it is this moral, constructive, and inspiring karma of this village, which is to generate something completely new, onto which people will concentrate their thoughts and feelings in the future. Are there any signs what it supposed to be? Well, it turns out that yes. After all, Wszewilki is the cradle where a new revolutionary philosophy was born, which presently takes the world by storm. This philosophy is called moral totalizm. Is it possible that UFOnauts conspire against Wszewilki only because they do not wish future generations of people learned what exactly kind of karma and from which exactly village on Earth caused the birth of this moral and constructive philosophy?

Fig. #5

Fig. #5: The village Wszewilki near Milicz - photographed in July 2004. This village is taken here from the local school, west to east, in the direction of Stawczyk, along the "new" road. This tallest building visible as if it stays at the exist of the road shown here, is the former electrical mill of Wszewilki. With a few short breaks it was used until around 1980. Then it was devastated. Presently probably nothing is left from the original equipment of it. Thus, similarly like from old waterworks located on the opposite end of Wszewilki, probably also from this electrical mill nothing can be saved for a possible museum of technology from Milicz. This mill in past was a reason for fall down, and for falling in disuse, of the old watermill of Wszewilki, which in past operated not far from the present dam on Barycz. The temptation of this new electrical mill standing just in this place was at the beginning of 20 century too big for owners of grain, who must pass by it to arrive to the old watermill, to resist it and to follow the sandy road to the old watermill. So they milled their grain in this new mill. This in turn caused an economical fall down of the old watermill. So it can be stated, that this electrical mill was also a part of the larger "conspiracy of UFOnauts against Wszewilki", which (the conspiracy) was aimed at the destruction of the past of this village. It firstly ruined economically the almost 1000 years old watermill on Barycz. Lately it was ruined itself!
       The road captured on the above photograph was land surveyed through the landscape as late as around 1875. This road may make ponder everyone who is curious. After all, in old times when it was surveyed through this land, the path of it was completely deprived of buildings. Thus, it could be designed along a straight line. However, it clearly winds like a snake. It turns out, that these winding was designed on purpose. Someone clearly intended, that it avoided passing through a miniature central square of historic Wszewilki, so that this square could be destroyed completely (i.e. dug out below the foundations) together with historic buildings which used to stand by it. So if the road is designed along a perfectly straight line, this destruction of the central square would be impossible, because destroyed would need to be also this newly surveyed road. So the windy course of the "new" road through Wszewilki shown above is a proof, that someone intentionally make sure that the glorious and moral past of the free village of Wszewilki would not last until present times.
       It is worth to add, that together with this historic central square of Wszewilki, destroyed are also two highly historic, heritage buildings of Wszewilki. These were:
         The very old hotel and pub. This hotel and pub used to stand by the crossroads of the old road from Pomorsko to the old watermill on Barycz, with an original road through Wszewilki. So it stood only several meters to west from the area where today stands a water anti-fire-basin. In fact, this anti-fire-basin was build in an exact place where the house of the owner of this hotel and pub from Wszewilki used to stay. I remember, that as a child I used to play in cellars of this burned house - which cellars started the hole in the ground in which later the present anti-fire-basin was constructed. I also remember, that with ruins of this house human bones were mixed. (A small section of this original road through Wszewilki still exists until today in Wszewilki-Stawczyk. So by extending this section of road to the other side of the railway, it can be determined where exactly this road used to run in past.)
         The very old Catholic church of Wszewilki. This church also stood by this central square, only tens of metres to south-east from the building of hotel (i.e. on the opposite corner of the same crossroad of both main roads). It stood only several meters to west from present railway line, in the place where presently a huge hole in the ground scares people after the soil was extracted from this place to build the railroad embankment. Fact is that at the time when it was dismantled, this church was not used anymore, and it already fallen into disuse. After all, it was a Catholic church, while a noticeable proportion of inhabitants of Wszewilki was protestant at that time, and attended the church in Milicz which presently is known as the church of St. Andrea Bobola (i.e. Św. Andrzeja Boboli). In turn Catholics which still lived in Wszewilki, already used then a "small" church in Milicz. But even by destroying the church which was unused then, to the destruction and loss was also subjected almost the entire history and past of Wszewilki. After all, a significant proportion of this history was recorded in writing in archives of this church. Although these archives were shifted somewhere, probably to the "small" church in Milicz, but still they disappeared later from there as well, either at the end of the Second World War, or just after the war.
         The interesting aspects of this old church from Wszewilki was, that it was constructed from lumps of the same paddock ore, from which the fortification walls of the medieval township Milicz, as well as the first churches of this town, were build. Similarly like every non-wooden church of that period, for sure it had sizable cellars underneath. This explains why in the area where it used to stand, the hole in the ground is now so deep (i.e. the most deep from all holes left in the place of former central square buildings of Wszewilki). The point was, that these who removed the church, removed also soil from underneath of it, until they completely removed these cellars which existed originally under the church. Of course, during the removal of this church, the remains of people who soon after the construction of this church were buried around it, also got removed. No wonder, that the section of the railroad between Wszewilki and Barycz, to the construction of the embankment of which the soil removed with this church together with human remains was used, always show some sort of mysterious force for attracting suicidal people and for causing deadly accidents. Only in time when I lived in Wszewilki, at this short section of the railroad which run on the top of embankment formed from soil taken from underneath of the church of Wszewilki, several people died for various strange reasons.
       The old road through Wszewilki also run in past by the point from which the above photograph was taken. Only that just in this place it turned to the right, with a slight arch parting towards south from the present new road. Then it run parallel to the present "new" road, in a distance of around 100 meters to south from it. The original farm buildings of Wszewilki were located along this old road. But when the new road shown above was surveyed, these old buildings needed to be abandoned and they deteriorated with the elapse of time. Together with them deteriorated also the history of Wszewilki. Soon after the Second World War still several old farm buildings existed, which in past stood along this old road (I remember four such old farm buildings). They looked very strange, as they stood abandoned in the middle of crop fields, and were very old. But these buildings got gradually dismantled by the end of 1960s. The longest existed a barn and a house, which since around 1955 were belonging to the family of Wojciechowscy (while immediately after the war - by the family of Frąckowiak). The reason was, that originally this barn and the old home to which it belonged, while standing by the old road of Wszewilki, also stood not far from the old road to the old watermill on Barycz. So after the new road was surveyed, the access to this building was still equally easy as previously. Thus owners of it were not forced to build a new house and a new barn by the new road. This house and barn are probably still remembered by many older inhabitants of Wszewilki. The reason was this very old grain-barn made of the clay in the "original architectural style of Wszewilki" - means made as a kind of clay cottage with the straw roof. (This grain-bar stood not far from the electrical mill of Wszewilki discussed above.) Storks used to nest on the roof of this grain-barn since ancient times. But even this old house and old barn were dismantled around years 1980s. Together with them two last examples of historic architecture and historic buildings of Wszewilki have disappeared.
       It is interesting, whether citizens of Milicz and Wszewilki will ever understand that such buildings and their equipment are priceless, as they represent human history. They disappeared almost completely from the surface of our planet. In turn, when they disappear for once, it will be impossible to ever show how they really looked like and what was inside of them. (After all, the historic reconstruction never is able to show how truly original objects look like.) So although it is difficult to live in them today, and they must eventually make a room for new, instead of being destroyed they should be cautiously dismantled and shifted to ethnic museums. Over there it would be extremely educational to look at them. In fact, many countries in the world are currently undertaking efforts to save and to preserve whatever was left out in them from old times. For example, near the city of Kuching at the Island of Borneo, there is an entire museum village constructed from such historical buildings and from their equipment. None of these buildings is younger than around 100 years. Tourists from the entire world are queuing for several days to be able to see this village. I was one of these tourists, and after seeing this village I was very touched and shaken. When one day I will fly to Borneo again, I will for sure visit this village again, even if this will require to await several days for a ticket.
       There is an old "wooden castle" (i.e. "grodzisko" in Polish) near Wszewilki. The present town Milicz eventuated from it. In fact, it asks that present people restore fortifications of it, and provide examples of buildings inside of these fortifications. Thus just such an ethnic museum with old village could be arranged inside of it.
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       In times when Wszewilki had its own central square and a pub-hotel, this square was a place for very famous markets (i.e. "jarmarków"). It had market for farm products every week, and also periodic markets for grain and cattle, as well as seasonal markets for horses. Actually, the horse market in Wszewilki was so famous, that horse traders kept arriving to it from surrounding countries and from areas located as far as Czechs and Baltic coasts. After the purposeful destruction of the central square in Wszewilki, these markets were shifted to the paddock located near banks of the Barycz river - to the area by present slaughter house of Milicz. They lasted in there until the end of 1980s. In fact, this "UFO conspiracy against Wszewilki" deprived this village not only the history and past, but also took away from it the key significance in the trade of farm products, and robbed it from traditional role of the main supplier of food to Milicz.
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       Of course, while reading in this item, that UFOnauts coined out and implemented a conspiracy aimed at robbing the past from Wszewilki, the reader most probably wonders, what evidence indicates, that these were UFOnauts, not e.g. people hostile towards Wszewilki. As it turns out, there is a variety of such evidence, that these could NOT be people, but must be UFOnauts. Here are some of them:
       (i) The continuous persecution of Wszewilki lasts too long - it spans over 120 years. So it is impossible to be implemented by people. After all, no people could be able to persecute inhabitants of just one village for over 120 years. The oldest evidence of this persecution, which survived until today, was dated around 1875, when the railway line which bulldogged the miniature central square of this village was constructed. But most probably even earlier persecutions of this village existed, only that no evidence of these survived until today. These persecutions were viciously continued after the year 1900, when the new electric mill caused the economical fall down of the historic