Abrari was born in 1939 into a religious family in the city of Jahrom. After high school, he went to Kazerun city in 1958 to work as a teacher, and in 1966 he was transferred to Shiraz. Once, in 1946, he was summoned to the Jahrom police station for attending an Arabic language class and religious meetings and was released after giving expressing his explanation. In 1968, while serving in education [as a teacher], he was accepted in the Faculty of Law of the University of Tehran and was therefore transferred to Tehran. He, who was close to the eminent Shirazi liberator and freedom-fighting Cleric_ Seyyed Hossein Ayatollah, and was related to the religious forces of Shiraz and Jahrom, joined the Mujahedin Organization (the MKO) in 1970 through Torab Haghshenas. Abrari underwent basic training and study courses, and was on his way to a higher level of political-organizational training when the organization was hit in September; Therefore, Abrari, who had been exposed, took a secret life from the 5th of October, 1971. In the first two years of his secret life, Ahmad Rezaei, Alireza Sepasi Ashtiani and Vahid Afrakhteh took charge of him as his superior. For a period of time, in the winter of 1972, he went to Mashhad and, under the responsibility of Abdul Zarrin Kafash, participated in the preparation of nitrate _ a chemical_ for operational use for the Organization (the MKO). In the same year, before traveling to Mashhad, he went to Isfahan with Vahid Afrakhteh and Ezzatollah Shahi (Motahhari) and took part in the explosion operation at the Shah Abbas Hotel in Isfahan. The only other operation in which he was directly involved was the explosion at a police station near Topkhaneh Square (now Imam Khomeini square) and Khayyam Street. Abrari, who was a Muslim by faith and was not willing to change in the process of ideological change, was mainly responsible for preparing and reproducing pamphlets (manuscript), announcements, and other publishing activities of the organization from 1952. In 1953, he married Rafaat Afraz, a native of Jahrom and a highly religious teacher at Refah School, and an active member of the Mujahedin Organization. During the height of ideological metamorphosis and after their bloody acts of revenge (known as intra-organizational purges), he was placed under the responsibility of Mohammad Khoshbakhtian and because he refused to accept Marxism again, he was sent to forced labor.
Abrari was finally arrested on November 29, 1975, with the guidance of the members of the Joint Committee, and was sentenced to death in the Shah’s military court, and was executed on December 5, 1976.