The parish cemetery
The original graveyard for parishioners of the villages of Kozy and Bujaków was the area around the old wooden church. In the mid 19th century, with the increase in the number of inhabitants and the spread of numerous deadly epidemics, the existing cemetery proved insufficient. Around 1860, the municipality of Kozy bought a plot of land from the farmer Lasek, with a view to establishing a new cemetery. In the 1920s, the graveyard became the property of the parish. In the same period, a small communal cemetery was also created, where the dead of different religions were buried. In 1967 during leveling works for the municipal cemetery, hundreds of graves were discovered. The oldest gravestone in the cemetery is the tomb of Fr Augustyn Brożek from 1866. The central part of the cemetery features the chapel of the Czecz family and a stone cross. Prominent individuals buried there include Fr Franciszek Żak who baptised Karol Wojtyła, Captain Aleksander Kunicki, a Home Army counter-intelligence officer and organiser of the assassination attempt on Franz Kutschera, Lieutenant Adolf Staszkiewicz, a legionary who died in the Polish-Bolshevik war, and Ensign Ignacy Piznal, a legionary, soldier of the Polish Army and Home Army, and an exile to Vorkuta.