Abraham ben Benjamin Ze'ev Brisker (Hebrew: אברהם בן בנימן זאב; died 1700) was a Polish-Lithuanian Jewish writer.
Biography
Following the expulsion of Jews from Lithuania in 1655, Abraham moved to Vienna, where he studied under the kabbalist Rabbi Shabtai Sheftel Horowitz.[1] On the expulsion of the Jews from that city in 1670, he went to Brest-Litovsk, where he married a daughter of Elijah Lipschütz and continued his studies under Rabbi Mordecai Guenzburg and Rabbi Ẓevi Hirsch. Abraham represented Brest-Litovsk at the 1683 meeting of the Council of the Lands in Lublin.[1]
Despite expressing a desire to emigrate to the Holy Land, this intention was never realized.[1]
Work
Abraham was the author of the following works:
Asarah Ma'amarot [Ten Words]. Frankfurt-on-the-Oder. 1680. On the ten divine words which, according to Pirkei Avot, were used in the creation of the world.