From 11 March 1928 to 10 July 1935, he represented the Nonpartisan Bloc for Cooperation with the Government for Vilnius electoral district, in the Senate of Poland.
Following graduating from university, he worked as a legal counsel in the Department of Railways, in, among other places, Vilnius, and Kharkiv.
During the First World War he was a member of the Citizen Guard, a volunteer vigilante paramilitary group that operated from 1914 to 1915 in the Congress Poland.
[9] He supported the rights of Lithuanian and Belarusian ethnic minorities in eastern Poland, and was involved in the establishment of the Polish–Belarussian Society in Vilnius in 1924.
[10] From 11 March 1928 to 10 July 1935, he represented the Nonpartisan Bloc for Cooperation with the Government for Vilnius electoral district, in the Senate of Poland.
[1][2] Following the Soviet invasion of Poland, Abramowicz was arrested by the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs, and taken to Siberia, where he died in either 1940 or 1941.