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People are resistant to change. People don't want to change that fast. People are scared. OK. It's been enough, what's been happening. He changed enough. Give the guy a chance
Hey! someone wants to give mubarak a chance!what'd gigi think?
GIGI IBRAHIM (through translator): I'm not against my homeland. I'm with my homeland. I'm with the nation. I'm with the people. I'm against the worthless regime, dictatorship and the tyrant.
GIGI IBRAHIM: The whole movement is being undermined right now by people and by ignorance and by lack of political life in Egypt.
NIGO GILMORE: That same day, the pro-Mubarak supporters are trying to get into the square.
GIGI IBRAHIM: The swarms of pro-Mubarak supporters are trying to infiltrate Tahrir Square, getting really violent.
Frontline followed 24-year-old Gigi Ibrahim, one of the young Egyptians who led the protests that ousted longtime President Hosni Mubarak, as the movement accelerated and she struggled to explain her involvement in the protests to her family.
JUDY WOODRUFF: And now, a portrait of one young Egyptian woman. Her family urged her not to join the activists, but she did and became a symbol of the uprising.
GIGI IBRAHIM: I don't know why or how I was brought up this way in this family.
GIGI IBRAHIM: I mean, some people, like myself and her, have never seen another president. I mean, I have never seen another president. I have never even seen another regime.
"GIGI IBRAHIM: The whole movement is being undermined right now by people and by ignorance and by lack of political life in Egypt.
I'm worried about it being turned around, because I already see it happening in the streets with average citizens, with people like my family. Protests will never die out. But the momentum and the support for it, that's -- that might die out.
I
NIGO GILMORE: That same day, the pro-Mubarak supporters are trying to get into the square.
PRO-MUBARAK SUPPORTERS (through translator): The people want President Mubarak!
GIGI IBRAHIM: The swarms of pro-Mubarak supporters are trying to infiltrate Tahrir Square, getting really violent."