Anthony Morris Frederick Abrahams AM (born 28 March 1944) is an Australian former rugby union international.
Educated at Cranbrook School, Sydney, Abrahams was a lock who was a reliable line-out jumper.
He debuted in the one-off Test in Wellington on the 1967 tour of New Zealand, opposite Colin Meads.
[2] He became an outspoken apartheid critic and protested the 1971 South Africa rugby union tour of Australia.
[3] In 2001 a Certificate of Appreciation, jointly signed by the South African High Commissioner Zolile Magugu and the co-convenors of the Anti-Apartheid Movement, Meredith Burgmann and Peter McGregor, was awarded to Abrahams and to each of the other six "Anti-Apartheid Wallabies" for their "personal sacrifice and outstanding contribution to the struggle for racial equality and democratic freedom in South Africa"[4][5] A lawyer by profession, Abrahams spent over two decades working for Clifford Chance in Paris and served as vice-president of the Association France-Australie.