She returned to Sierra Leone in 1963 where she was appointed Assistant Secretary, under former Sierra Leone's Prime Minister Milton Margai's administration. During this time she met and married eventual president of Sierra Leone, Ahmad Tejan Kabbah in 1965. Theirs was an interfaith union as she was a devout Catholic and her husband was Muslim. She went with Kabbah to England where they both studied law. She joined her husband in Lesotho where she commenced the practice of law in the chambers of the distinguished jurist, where she was the sole female attorney in the entire country. She also practiced law in Tanzania and became involved in diplomatic activities such as reporting on the legal status of the African child and mother at UNICEF. The family moved to New York City in 1981 where Mrs Kabbah obtained a Political Affairs Research appointment at the De-colonization Committee of the United Nations. She was later promoted as Head of the Executive Office, Department of Political Affairs, De-colonization of Trusteeship, with special responsibility for Budget, Personnel and General Administration. Mrs Kabbah also taught French and English at the City University of New York.
Politics
Kabbah moved back to Sierra Leone in 1995. During that time she accepted the chairmanship of the committee established to formulate plans for a return to civilian government, and to draft a new constitution. The National Provisional Ruling Council, a military government under the leadership of Brigadier GeneralJulius Maada Bio organized the general election in 1996, it was Sierra Leone's first general election since March 1967. Her husband Ahmad Tejan Kabbah was nominated by the Sierra Leone People's Party to run for president and became the new president of Sierra Leone.
In her new capacity as First Lady of Sierra Leone, Kabbah planned to set up an Office of the First Lady from which she would run her own projects. However, under the influence of members of his party, her husband prevented this. She endeavored to use her skills as a lawyer and administrator to work with her husband but was again rebuffed by members of the male-dominated Sierra Leone People's Party who believed that the role of First Lady should remain largely symbolic.
Death
Kabbah died in a London hospital just a month after she and her husband had settled in Sierra Leone. Her husband later married Isata Jabbie.
Legacy
Her enduring legacy is her work on the constitution of Sierra Leone. Two schools, the Lady Patricia Kabbah Primary School in Regent, and the Lady Patricia Kabba Memorial Secondary School, was named for her in Goderich.