Yehezkel ("Chatzkel") Abramsky was born in
Dashkovichy,
Grodno Governorate,
Russian Empire (in present-day
Belarus) was the third child and eldest son of Mordechai Zalman Abramsky, a local timber merchant, and his wife, Freydel Goldin of Grodno. His parents were deeply religious but the village lacked enough Jews to support a prayer service so Yehezkel studied at home before moving on to study in the
yeshivas of
Telz,
Mir,
Slabodka and particularly
Brisk under Rabbi
Chaim Soloveitchik. At the age of 17 he became a rabbi, serving, in turn, the communities of
Smolyan,
Smalyavichy, and
Slutsk. Following the
Russian Revolution, he was at the forefront of opposition to the
Communist government's attempts to repress the Jewish religion and culture. During this time he would serve as both the Rabbi of Slutsk and
Smolensk. As a result, the
Soviet government refused Abramsky permission to leave and take up the rabbinate of
Petah Tikva in
Palestine in both 1926 and 1928. In 1926 while serving as the rabbi of
Slutsk, he joined (together with Rabbi
Shlomo Yosef Zevin) the
Vaad Harabbonim of the U.S.S.R. In 1928 he started a
Hebrew magazine,
Yagdil Torah (lit. "Make [the]
Torah Great"), but the
Soviet authorities closed it after the first two issues had appeared. In 1929 he was arrested and sentenced to five years' hard labor in
Siberia, where he is said to have composed Talmudic commentaries on translucent cigarette papers. However, in 1931 he was released due to intervention by the
German government under
Chancellor Brüning, who exchanged him for six communists they held. ==London Beth Din==