Gibran is an Arabic name often interpreted as restoration, compensation, or mending.
Gibran is an Arabic name derived from the root j-b-r, which carries the sense of "to restore," "to set right," or "to mend what is broken" — the same root that gives Arabic algebra its name (al-jabr, the reunion of broken parts) and the divine name Al-Jabbar, "the Compeller" or "the Restorer." It is a name with a quietly powerful meaning: the one who makes whole, who repairs, who brings things back to rightness. The name is forever and profoundly associated with Khalil Gibran (1883–1931), the Lebanese-American poet, painter, and philosopher whose work The Prophet — published in 1923 — became one of the best-selling books of the twentieth century, translated into over 100 languages and rarely out of print for a century.
Gibran's lyrical, mystical prose, blending Sufi spirituality, Christian symbolism, and Romantic philosophy, reached readers across every culture and creed. Passages from The Prophet are read at weddings and funerals worldwide, giving Gibran a rare kind of literary immortality — his words are present at the thresholds of human life. To name a child Gibran is to invoke this legacy almost unavoidably, but it is a worthy inheritance.
The name signals a family that values poetry, depth, and the cross-cultural conversation between East and West. It has remained in use across the Arab world and the Lebanese diaspora, carrying both the personal honor of a great ancestor and the root meaning of restoration — a name for someone who might heal what is broken.