(1886-1976). Rabbi and talmudic scholar in Russia, the United Kingdom, and Israel. Abramsky was born in Lithuania and studied in some of the leading yeshivot there: Telz, Mir, and Slobodka. He was the student of R. Ḥayyim Soloveichik of Brisk and of R. Ḥayyim Ozer Grodzenski of Vilna, both considered among the greatest Torah scholars of the last century, and gained a reputation for his great learning. During and after World War I, Abramsky wandered throughout Russia and its later incarnation as the Soviet Union, seeking to strengthen Jewish observance. He was then appointed rabbi of Slutsk and afterwards rabbi of Smolensk.
In 1928 he was surprisingly granted permission by the Soviet authorities to publish a Torah journal, which he coedited with S.Y. Zevin. However, in 1930 the Soviet authorities convicted him of being a "counterrevolutionary," and he was sentenced to a prison term at hard labor. Thanks to major efforts by his wife and friends as well as Jews throughout the world, Abramsky was released in 1932 and permitted to move to England. There he played a leading role among British Jewry, especially among the Orthodox. He was appointed rabbi of the Machzikei ha-Das synagogue and a dayyan of the London Beth Din. Upon retiring in 1951, Abramsky moved to Israel. There he became a member of the Mo'etset Gedolé ha-Torah, the supervisory rabbinical body of Agudat Israel, and he soon made his mark on Orthodox circles in Israel.
Among his published works are Ḥazon Yeḥezkel on thetosefta, a major work published between 1925 and 1967, and Divré Mamonot (1939). In 1955, he was awarded the Israel Prize for Rabbinical Literature.




