He also joined Besim Nuri, Ferit Vokopola, and Eshref Frashëri as local delegates at the Congress of Lushnjë;[3] Vokopola gave the opening address and Karbunara blessed the end.[6] From 1920 to 1924, he belonged to the democratic party of deputies backing Fan Noli,[5] and he backed Noli in the 1924 June Revolution, fleeing with other supporters to Italy after King Zog I of Albania took power that December.[3] He joined the centrist anti-Zog exile group, Bashkimi Kombëtar.[5]
He returned to Albania after the Italian invasion of Albania, and in 1943, the fascist authorities burned down his house and khanqah. The German occupation forces imprisoned him in 1944, after the Italian surrender. His khanqah became a meeting place for the National Liberation Movement (Albanian: Frontit Nacional-Çlirimtar) that he supported.
When the FNÇ took power in the 1945 Albanian parliamentary election, Karbunara was elected a deputy from the Lushnjë district. Joining the opposition, he was prosecuted and executed for allegedly “forming a traitorous organization linked to war criminals foreign and domestic aided by agents of Anglo-American imperialism, an organization that committed acts of sabotage, espionage, and terrorism to overthrow the people’s power and raise an oppressive regime of the [monarchist] Legality Movement Party.” His son was shot in front of him, and their remains have yet to be found.[3]
Persecution of his family
Karbunara's nephew Beqiri was also shot. The Karbunara family was evicted from their home and their lands confiscated, and they were forced to live in a collective estate in Lushnjë. The remaining men in the family were subjected to a combined 123 years in prison.[7]