[1] She was educated in Chad's capital city of N'Djamena and spent her holidays with the indigenous Mbororo people, who are traditionally nomadic farmers, herding and tending cattle.
[5] In a written testimony to the International Organization for Migration, Ibrahim emphasized that her people, and indigenous communities like her own, are "direct victims of climate change," which has worked to displace them, forcing them to abandon their own lands in search of ones that can sustain their way of life.
Ibrahim has written on the importance of recognizing indigenous people's rights when crafting global climate change for a variety of outlets, including Quartz and the World Economic Forum's Agenda.
[9] Ibrahim has worked collaboratively with UNESCO and the Indigenous Peoples of Africa Coordinating Committee (IPACC) on a project to 3D map Chad's Sahel desert region, where 250,000 Mbororos currently live, relying on subsistence farming.
and explained how our grandmother can tell about the weather forecast, animal immigration, size of fruit, and behaviours of her own cattle by observing her environment.
She disagreed with the opinion of Schwarzenegger that people can help to stop climate change by driving electric cars, reducing meat consumption, and other minor civilian actions.
She also appeared as an interviewee on the Un and Africa Podcast on that event where she spoke on the importance of tech in reducing the impact of climate change on desert countries.
Later, she attended Ibrahim serves in a number of leadership capacities advocating for the importance of indigenous knowledge in mitigating the effects of climate change.