Church of the Protection of the Mother of God - Orthodox parish church in Sławatycze. It belongs to the Terespol deanery of the Lublin-Chełm diocese of the Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church.
The first Orthodox church in Sławatycze was built at the end of the 15th or at the beginning of the 16th century. After 1596, the parish that administered it accepted the union. The currently functioning Orthodox church was erected in the years 1910-1912 in place of a former Uniate building from the 18th century. The founder of the building was a Slavophile publicist and landowner Klawdij Paschałow. The building was commissioned in September 1912 and since then it has been the main temple of the parish in Sławatycze. In the years 1915–1918, the church served as a field hospital. In the Second Polish Republic, it again became an active Orthodox temple. In 1938, it was on the list of churches to be destroyed as part of the Polonization and Revindication action, but its demolition was stopped by the parish priest of the local Roman Catholic parish. In 1947, when the Orthodox population of Sławatycze was deported as part of the "Wisła" Operation, the church was abandoned and fell into disrepair for the next three years. Irregular services were held there from Easter in 1952. It was restored to permanent liturgical use in 1965 thanks to the efforts of the superior of the monastery of St. Onofrio in Jabłeczna, Archimandrite Eulogius.