Ibrahim told
Al Jazeera that her political activism began when she started talking to people who were involved in the
labour movement, and that her family was uncomfortable with her going to protests. She became involved in the
Egyptian revolution of 2011 as an organizer, additionally engaging in
citizen journalism by using social media including
Twitter while attending protests Ibrahim and other Egyptian youth on Twitter played a leading role in organizing
the events of January 25, 2011. Her tweets also helped to document
arrests and
state violence for
human rights groups. In October 2011, Ibrahim reported that she had been briefly arrested while filming a
strike action by
public transport workers in
Cairo, and was released after agreeing to delete her
footage. By winter of 2012, Ibrahim had more than 30,000
followers on Twitter, and was active in protests against the
Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.
Reception by Western media cover from February 28, 2011, with Ibrahim at bottom right.|alt=Time magazine cover with the headline "The Generation Changing the World" and a posed photo of a group of activists including Ibrahim Ibrahim became a face of the events in Egypt for much of the
media. She regularly appeared on
CNN, sometimes
live from the 2011 protests, and additionally reported live from the protests on
Al Jazeera. Her political views were rarely mentioned in Western media. On
The Daily Show, Ibrahim told
Jon Stewart that she initially joined the protests because of a class she took at the American University in Cairo called "Social Mobilization under Authoritarian Regimes."
The New York Times conducted an
interview with her using
Skype, and a February 2011
Frontline episode titled "Gigi's Revolution" examined her relationship with her elite Egyptian family and "her attempts to convince her family of the righteousness of her cause." On February 14, 2011, she appeared on an
Al Jazeera English talk show alongside
Alaa Abd El-Fattah and
Mohamad Waked to discuss the events in Egypt after the fall of
Hosni Mubarak. She was also featured on the cover of the February 28, 2011 issue of
Time magazine, later criticizing the related article in that issue by saying that the
West "needs to believe that we could not have [made revolution possible] without their digital toys."
After the 2013 coup in Egypt In July 2013, many
militants from the revolution chose to leave after the
2013 Egyptian coup d'état, but Ibrahim stayed. , Ibrahim was living in
Nasr City and continued to participate in activism and protests. In August 2013, she was part of a group called the Third Square that met in Sphinx Square in
Giza to protest both the
military government and the
Muslim Brotherhood. After the 2013 coup, Ibrahim's husband went into
exile because he wanted to remain a journalist, while she founded a
shoe manufacturing company in Cairo. In January 2021, she told
Jeune Afrique that it was dangerous to protest and to be a journalist who didn't work on behalf of the
regime, explaining that "We now live under a dictator worse than Mubarak [...] Any protest is punishable by sanctions. The protest is now being done underground." == Shoe manufacturing career ==