@meowth88
Visual perception by blind people has been an active area of research for many years. It would be a mistake to lump all causes and extents of blindness together in a single answer.
The answer to your question depends depends on some definitions. First, being born blind is also called congenital blindness. If you want to do some reading on that yourself, that would be a better search term.
Second, you need to define what you mean by blindness. The term is applied to people who are "legally" blind to those who lack even the perception of light.
Finally, one form of congenital blindness is cortical blindness. Those individuals have anatomically normal eyes, but the defect(s) are in the visual cortex. Is that what you mean by your question?
The principal children's hospital associated with the University of Pennsylvania is often referred to by its acronym, CHOP (Children's Hospital of the Uni. Pennsylvania). That university has been a leader in gene therapy. Here is a feel good article from CHOP on treatment of a specific type of blindness that should brighten your day:
https://www.chop.edu/news/children-with-congenital-blindness-can-see-after-gene-therapy.html
If you will better define your question, I will try to find some research articles on the subject.
John