After graduation, up to 1965, Sharafkandi taught chemistry in the Kurdish towns of
Bukan and Mahabad. Because of his political activities, he was transferred first to
Arak, then to
Karaj by the Shah's regime, before being appointed assistant lecturer in chemistry at the Teachers’ Higher Training College in Tehran. In 1972, he went to France to study at the University of Paris VI, where he received his Ph.D. in analytical chemistry in 1976. While studying in
Paris in 1973, he met Dr.
Abdul Rahman Ghassemlou, the Secretary-general of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI), and joined the party. Upon his return to Iran, he became Ghassemlou's representative in his country. In 1976, he went back to Iran to teach at the Teachers’ Higher Training College in Tehran. After the fall of the Shah's regime in February 1979, he resigned from his position and joined the reawakening Kurdish movement, which in August became the target of a “Holy War” decreed by Ayatollah Khomeini. In February 1979, after the fall of the Shah's regime, the PDKI's activities became illegal. Dr. Sharafkandi was elected alternate member of the Central Committee and appointed as the Party's official in Tehran. During the summer of 1979, he became a permanent Party cadre and in 1980, during the following Congress, he acceded to the Political Bureau. From then onwards, up to the assassination in July 1989 in Vienna of Dr. Ghassemlou by Iranian emissaries, he was regularly re-elected and put in charge of the Party's publications. In 1986, he also took office as assistant Secretary-general of PDKI. After Ghassemlou's assassination, he temporarily took over the Party's leadership until December 1991, when he was unanimously elected Secretary-general during the IXth Congress. ==Death==