In Harmony

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Teen musician brings message of healing to international stage

It started with a love of music.

At six years old, Oak Brook resident Sophia Ibrahim first learned to play the piano. She found the process joyful and therapeutic.

“Growing up, [music] had a big healing power in my life,” Ibrahim said.

Sophia Ibrahim started playing piano at six years old. Her love of music is the foundation for Harmony Healers.

She soon began performing in recitals, putting herself out into the community to share her gifts and sharpen her skills. She often played in nursing homes, and the impact these performances had on both her and the residents was profound.

“I realized that music has this effect on residents and patients and all these people as well,” Ibrahim said. “It transfers that healing power to all of them, and it’s really beautiful.”

Wanting to give other students the same opportunity, the Hinsdale Central High School student started Harmony Healers in 2022.

“[Harmony Healers] gives students the opportunity to play in nursing homes and hospitals and other private events so they can express their music artistry and the way they like playing, and explore how they like to perform publicly,” Ibrahim said. “That also just affects the people around them and gives a better environment and positive impact as well, which is great.”

As Harmony Healers grew, Ibrahim’s interest in using music as a healing tool deepened. She looked for ways to expand upon her message beyond the walls of Hinsdale-area hospitals.

Sophia Ibrahim shares her message of using music to heal cultural divides in post-conflict societies.

“True reconstruction must heal the human spirit.”

— Sophia Ibrahim, Harmony Healers

In September 2025, Ibrahim traveled to Srebrenica, Bosnia, where she studied how music can be utilized as a healing tool in a post-conflict society.

“It started when I was learning about Bosnia and the atrocity and the genocide that was happening there in the 1990s,” Ibrahim explained. “I came across this sort of program called the House of Good Tones, and they use music as a way to heal across the different ethnicities.”

Ibrahim jumped at the opportunity to perform at the House of Good Tones — a moment that catapulted her nonprofit work with Harmony Healers to an international stage.

 

Ibrahim was invited to speak at the “Rebuilding Ukrainian Society” roundtable in Brussels, Belgium.

“I wanted to take these lessons of how music literally served as a way to heal different communities that were fighting over war, and how we can apply that to Ukraine with the Ukraine and Russia war,” Ibrahim said.

After hearing about her research and experiences, the European Conservatives and Reformists Group invited Ibrahim to present at the “Rebuilding Ukrainian Society” roundtable in Brussels, Belgium, on Sept. 30.

There, the 17-year-old spoke alongside senior members of the European Parliament, Ukrainian civil society leaders, and international experts, and she urged policymakers to embrace cultural healing through the arts as part of a comprehensive approach to Ukraine’s recovery.

“When we speak of rebuilding Ukraine, we often focus on the visible — bridges, schools, energy grids. But history teaches us that post-war societies do not fail because the buildings are gone,” Ibrahim said in her speech. “They fail when the people remain divided, mistrustful, and traumatized. True reconstruction must heal the human spirit.”

Ibrahim shared her experience at the House of Good Tones and cited research showing other countries — Northern Ireland, Kosovo, Rwanda, and more — have used the arts to promote cultural healing similar to Bosnia.

She also spoke about Harmony Healers, where she’s seen firsthand how “music can restore dignity and connection.”

“It was really amazing,” Ibrahim said about this opportunity. “It was cool to see these policymakers, these people who want to make a change in the world. And it just really inspired a lot of… inspiration in what I want to continue doing, and how I want to do it.”

Ibrahim believes many leaders look to the youth for fresh perspectives and that young people have a voice worth listening to.

“I think there’s a lot of emphasis just on the younger generation and how we can use them to build up our future, because that is where the future is,” Ibrahim said.

Her father, Azeem, helped connect Ibrahim with people working on reconstruction in Ukraine. He’s amazed by her work and its positive reception.

“[I’m] obviously very proud of her,” Azeem said. “It’s been an absolutely wonderful experience. Hopefully, she’ll continue on this pathway in terms of trying to have an impact.”

Both Ibrahim and her father are appreciative of the Hinsdale Central teachers and staff for their encouragement, both with Harmony Healers in the community and beyond.

“The school has also been very, very supportive of her. When they first learned that she had this opportunity, they were extremely excited and fully supported her,” Azeem said.

Ibrahim will graduate from Hinsdale Central in the spring, heading to college to pursue her dreams of becoming a physician focused on holistic healing with music and medicine. But Harmony Healers and its growth are still at the front of her mind, even when she moves away.

“The ideal goal is to have this continue to open up new chapters so that people can create their own little Harmony Healers as well,” Ibrahim said. “We can sort of spread this out across many places so that they can all have their own networks of nursing homes and individual places that are catered to the location and community.”

As her message gains traction, she hopes other students will follow suit — using their voices to better the world.

“Put yourself out there and know that your voice matters,” Ibrahim said. “[You have] the power to grow and be something and do something good.”

For more information about Harmony Healers, visit www.harmony-healers.com.

 

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