The church was built from 1682 to 1732 as a church adjacent to a
Carmelite convent. The Polish-Lithuanian Provincial, of the Carmelite Order, Fr. Marcin Charzewicz, through Fr. Dr. Marcin Behma, the theology notary of the General provinces, purchased the land for 2,000 złoty from Col. Jan Weretycki and his wife's estate in the town of Leszno near Warsaw. The Bishop of Poznań, Stefan Wierzbowski, in a letter on September 2, 1682 to the Provincial Order of Carmelites allowed them to raise a cross and celebrate Mass, which was tantamount to permission to build a church and monastery. Permission to build was also expressed by the Leszczyńscy brothers, owners of Leszno:
Bogusław Leszczyński - abbot and rector of
Płock and
Raphael – father of the future king
Stanisław Leszczyński. The first service was held on September 8, 1682 in the chapel decorated with: "the miraculous icon of the silver framework, the author unknown and depicting the Mother of God". This image was then placed in the main altar of the church. The church was dedicated on April 27, 1732 by the papal legate in Poland, Camillo Paolucci. Four side altars were devoted to saints:
Joseph,
Adalbert,
Elijah and
Magdalena de Pazzi. Images for these altars were painted by
Szymon Czechowicz. During the
Great Northern War the monastery was occupied by the
Swedes. It was restored in 1853, when a chapel and clock tower were built. The cost of the restoration was more than 22,000 złoty, some of which was contributed by the government. During World War II, it was one of two active churches within the
ghetto (the other was
All Saints Church). During that time the church was run by priest Puder, who aided many Jews, facilitating the construction of a tunnel leading outside the ghetto under the church. After the war, it was rebuilt between 1951 and 1956. The monastery buildings were rebuilt. In the church hangs a copy of an image of Our Lady of
Byalynichy, the original hangs in a castle at
Lyakhavichy. In connection with the construction of the through
Warsaw W-Z Route' and the widening of Leszno Street (at the time called
Gen. K. Świerczewskiego Avenue), on the night of November 30 to December 1, 1962, the church was moved back 21 meters. In 1968 an organ was added. From 1984 to 1985 the church parsonage was built. In 2009 the facade underwent a partial renovation. During the renovation, baroque colors were restored to the front of the church. On April 4, 2012 an antique, baroque dress of the Mother of God (which had even survived the
Warsaw Uprising) was stolen, and the next day a painting of Our Lady of Perpetual Help was stolen as well. ==History of the monastery==