The Czarna Haà Âcza () is a river in north-eastern Poland and north-western Belarus. It is the largest river of the Suwaà Âki Region and a tributary of the Neman. The river flows through Lake Haà Âcza, the deepest lake in Poland (maximum depth ), and Wigry Lake in Wigry National Park, before entering the Augustów Canal near Rygol. Its total drainage basin covers , of which lies in Poland. The riverbed contains large postglacial boulders, and the upper course has a gradient of 2.3â°, giving it a near-montane character unusual for the North European Plain.
The name Haà Âcza may derive from a Jatvingian or Lithuanian word Anca, meaning "a river flowing in a long, deep channel," consistent with the river's steep-sided trough. A folk tradition recorded in local sources attributes the name to the Lithuanian Duke Trojden, who, during a battle with the Teutonic Knights at a crossing of the dark-watered river, declared gana cze ("enough retreating"). The river became known as Haà Âcza Czarna (Juodoji Anca, Black Haà Âcza) to distinguish it from the Biaà Âa Haà Âcza (Baltoji Anca, White Haà Âcza) near Veisiejai in Lithuania.
The river rises near Lake Jegliniszki, close to the village of Rogoà ¼ajny Wielkie, at roughly above sea level. It flows intermittently for several kilometres before receiving spring-fed inflows and becoming permanent about above Lake Haà Âcza. After passing through Lake Haà Âcza, the river enters a steep, stony channel (a glacial rynna) with a swift current, passing a forested esker formed in a subglacial tunnel.
Below the village of Turtul the valley widens across broad sandy terraces, remnants of Pleistocene meltwater flows that carved the present valley through the moraine plateau roughly 12,000 years ago. The river then passes through Suwaà Âki, cutting through gravel deposits, before entering Wigry Lake. South of Wigry the character changes to that of a slow lowland river with meanders, aquatic vegetation, and sections resembling oxbow lakes.
Near Wysoki Most the river enters the Augustów Primeval Forest. The reach between Dworczyskiem and Rygol is considered the most scenic: clear water over a sandy bed, fast current on bends, and steep banks lined with old pines, spruces, oaks, alders, and birches. Near the village of Rygol the river joins the Augustów Canal; a residual natural branch, the Szà Âamica, carries flow onward to the Neman in Belarus.
Near Rygol the Czarna Haà Âcza feeds the Augustów Canal, a waterway built between 1824 and 1839 to designs by Lieutenant-Colonel Ignacy Pràdzyà Âski. The canal linked the Vistula basin (via the Biebrza and Netta rivers) with the Neman basin via the Czarna Haà Âcza, bypassing Prussian territory after Prussia imposed high customs duties on Polish goods in 1821. It was the first summit-level canal in Central Europe connecting the two river systems. The canal was added to the UNESCO World Heritage Tentative List on 30 January 2004.
The river passes through Wigry National Park (established 1989; ), which contains 42 lakes, over 1,700 recorded animal species, 202 bird species, and roughly 250 European beavers. The park was designated a Ramsar wetland site in 2002 and joined Natura 2000 in 2004.
Brown trout (Salmo trutta) is the dominant fish species in the river. A 2023 study in Fisheries & Aquatic Life documented the recovery of the fish community after a wastewater treatment plant failure in Suwaà Âki in July 2018 killed approximately of fish. Species abundance returned to near pre-incident levels within ten months, though the composition initially favoured more tolerant species such as white bream and European perch; brown trout populations recovered with the aid of stocking over the following years. Eutrophication from Suwaà Âki's domestic sewage was historically the primary threat to water quality in the Czarna Haà Âcza and Lake Wigry; construction of a modern treatment plant with phosphorus precipitation has reduced nutrient loading.
The Czarna Haà Âcza is one of Poland's most popular kayaking rivers. The standard route runs from the Camaldolese monastery at Wigry village to Augustów, a distance typically covered in three to five days. The route passes through the Augustów Primeval Forest, where wolves, moose, red deer, and beavers inhabit the surrounding woodland, and through the locks of the Augustów Canal. The trail is rated accessible to beginners and families, with rental stations at Wigry, Czerwony Folwark, and Maà Âkowa Ruda.