“Wrocław is a city located at the meeting point of three countries very strictly connected with one another by history. In a way it is a city of meetings – it is a city which unites. Here spiritual traditions of the East and the West meet”, said Pope John Paul II during the International Eucharistic Congress in Wrocław in 1997. The Pope was right – Wrocław is a city of meetings of countries, nations, religions and cultures. Of the East and the West, of the North and the South. Of Catholicism, Protestantism and Judaism. In the past this city on the Oder belonged to Piast Dukes, and then to Bohemians, Austrians, Prussians and then again to Poles. Each nation left material and non-material heritage. Thanks to them and despite huge damages caused by the last war, Wrocław today seems to be “Little America” – a country which is a kind of “a melting pot of nations”. Today after decades of Communist rule, we know that the words “Wrocław stones speak Polish” were deceptive. Here stones speak various languages. Here you can see – like in a lens – an idea of uniting Europe.