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Fatima Jibrell : ウィキペディア英語版 | Fatima Jibrell
Fatima Jibrell ((ソマリ語:''Fadumo Jibriil''), (アラビア語:فاطمة جبريل)) is a Somali-American environmental activist. She was the co-founder and Executive Director of the Horn of Africa Relief and Development Organization (now Adeso), co-founder of Sun Fire Cooking, and was instrumental in the creation of the Women's Coalition for Peace. ==Biography== Jibrell was born on December 30, 1947, in Somalia to a nomadic family.〔Geoffrey Gilbert, ''World poverty'', (ABC-CLIO: 2004), p.111〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Horn Relief:Goldman Prize )〕 Her father was a merchant marine who settled in New York City. As a child in Somalia, she attended a British boarding school until the age of 16, when she left the country to join her father in the United States. There, Jibrell graduated from high school.〔Dorothy Otieno ("Environmentalist Who Returned From USA to Salvage Forests" ) ''East African Standard'' (June 26, 2002)〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Fatima Jibrell )〕 In 1969, she returned to Somalia and worked for the government, whereafter she married her husband, Abdulrahman Mohamoud Ali, a diplomat. While she and her family were stationed in Iraq, Jibrell began undergraduate studies at the University of Damascus in nearby Syria. In 1981, her husband was transferred to the U.S., where she completed her Bachelor of Arts in English. She eventually went on to pursue a Master's in Social Work from the University of Connecticut. While living in the U.S., Jibrell and her husband raised five daughters. She also became an American citizen.〔〔
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