I'm a new revert... I'm not sure if I'm doing things the right way around. I've learned the alphabet and am now able to read quran. Thats take about 4 months. I learned just to read but not comprehension. Do you help women?
Sheikh, what you stated is absolutely correct. You described EXACTLY how i struggled to learn Arabic. It was not easy but very rewarding afterwards. Jzkhairan🎉
Mashallah, your words are spot on Sidi. Became Muslim 7 years ago, it’s been seven years of “oh I should learn Arabic”. Alhamdulillah I’ve been putting in effort lately and seeing results (helps to have married an Arab) but a lot of time I should have benefited from
@@georgeshafilethbridge7186 the main thing is you’ve started now , I’m glad your seeing results alhamdulillah may Allah grant you success brother , and yeh being married to an Arab is gona help for sure man 👊🏻
I've gone through the medina books 1-3. On my last lesson in book 3, alhamdulillah!. It's taken me many years (can't remember its been that long now). But I chipped away at it slowly, finding time here and there. Its possible to do it, but you got to persevere. I'm by no means an expert but reading the Quran now is more enjoyable/interesting and It's opening up to me slowly.
There students at my mosque that learn to resd the Quran easily in 8 months but the actual language is really hard im lesrning more and more everyday its a good place to start memorizing all letters im not even close to done but i wont stop until i learn it like i know English May Allah bless u
JazaAllahu khairan. Been trying to learn arabic but often fall out along the way for about 5times now. But of recent, i have made up my mind and praying Allah help me get through this journey. Working, married, having kids and patents to look after are what keeps me busy, that not an axcuse though.
It’s been half a year now since I’ve started this journey with Arabic language and I know it’s gonna take years for me just to get on a train.Discipline and consistency are the key factors to succeed in this world and the next. for encouragement بارك الله فيك
@@МирзаМирзамагомедов-щ9э may Allah bless you my brother and grant you success - Aameen Keep on going and you will achieve your goal inshaaAllah, sometimes you might think that you aren’t making any progress but that’s just how Arabic is it’s really subtle but then before you know it your are able to understand the Quraan , sunnah , books of the scholars , conversations etc , keep me updated with your journey and if you need any help just let me know inshaaAllah
Asalamu alaykum wa rahmatullahi wa barakatu! JazakAllahu khayr wa barakAllahu feek! As an ethnic Arab who grew up in the West, unfortunately, I am separated from my heritage native language and only more familiar with the colloquial 'Ummi' tongue of northern Sham. It sucks to understand parts of what is being read or heard but not be able to completely comprehend everything or replicate it. I have tried to study Modern Standard Arabic a couple of times but found the lack of motivation and external competing commitments to be detrimental to success. What you said about it being a long journey and requiring devotion and steadfastness is so true. It really takes prioritising your faith and goal in life. Sometimes Allah subhanahu was ta3ala forces or rather guides you towards learning his Deen. May Allah a3za wajal reward and guide you and all of us with Jannatul Firdows.
@@phoenixknight8837 It’s cool you are familiar with your dialect though allahuma baarik, I don’t speak any dialects but I wish I could haha Thankyou for your comment and your du’aa , may Allah bless you are grant you success to learn the language of the Quraan and sunnah - Aameen
You are straight to the point, I was born in Muslim family but yet I know nothing about arabic. I am trying to put effort but me and my shaytan is helping me not to . But I am still hopeful.
@@yeasirarafat1003 the main thing is your trying akhee, may Allah grant you success, if your struggling to be consistent with it then start small and build up , get into a habit of 20mins per day until your consistent and then slowly build it up to whatever is doable for you in your life circumstances , don’t give up akhee , keep on fighting your own soul and the shaytaan , it’s worth it 👊🏻💪🏻💜
السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته This is great Baarak Allahu Feek brother the ups and downs on with the studies of arabic and the voices of people saying 6-10 months then you sit there in your room in the west after 10 months of everyday work and you feel like you stupid for not being a poet that spits lines of poetry. We hear all these 1 year to learn courses but it's funny that almost 99% of students drop out showing that it is not a 1 year thing.
@@whakamoko وعليكم السلام ورحمة الله Exactly brother I agree with you 100%, keep putting in the work and you will see the results inshaaAllah, may Allah grant you success , there is without doubt going to be ups and downs but make du’aa and keep on striving my brother , keep me updated on your journey inshaaAllah , baarakAllahu feek
I needed to hear this, I’m already studying at a pretty good institute but I put too much pressure on myself to see big results by now when it’s only been months Brother could you please make a video talking about what to do outside of the lessons. Things like going listening to Arabic videos to help, and ways to practice. Sometimes even tho I’m doing the lessons and memorising vocabulary and grammar rules, I still find myself stuck with what else I should put in my routine and how much of it if that makes sense. Honestly even if you could make an entire video talking about how to go about studying from start to finish and then also include what I mentioned that would be great BarakAllahu feek!
The place I study also offers practicing speaking and what we learn with teachers and other students 2-4hours a week but I still feel like there’s more I can do since I’ve got a lot of free time
@@Unknownn-q70 I’m going to be making videos specifically about what to do outside of lesson time inshaaAllah , I would argue that what you do outside of the lesson is what really makes or breaks you
@@IsmaaeelMeehan 100% there was a student of knowledge that said 2 men went to Egypt to study Arabic, did the same course and everything and one of them it was like he didn’t succeed meanwhile the other did meaning he was able to speak, understand and everything at a fluent level and the other couldn’t even speak. and the difference was that the one who did succeed used what he learned outside of the lessons and would practice! And If I remember correctly I think the one who didn’t succeed went Egypt before the other one but he just wasn’t practicing and applying anything he picked up. At the beginning of the video you mentioned it’s important to make Arabic a lifestyle, a person will never do that if they don’t have the craziest thirst to learn the language, like it really needs to feel like something that a person can’t live without. Because if you don’t have that hunger to learn the language doing more and more outside of the lessons isn’t possible Best way to get that hunger for it is listening to a bunch of videos or even reading things about the importance of Arabic, what you’re missing out on without Arabic etc.
hello, i have madina arabic reader book 1 and 2. i also have two journals that one is for writing vocabulary and the other is easy grammar and arabic short stories. i am really unsure for what other method to use to improve my arabic any advice?
@@463949 vocab in general is good at first , if by grammar you are meaning things like the madinah books and by conversation things like bayna yadayk then I would say it depends on your learning style and your overall approach to the language, some people like to learn the technicalities of the language where as others prefer to learn vocab and be able to have a conversation, either way they are both going to be helpful as long as you are getting enough listening and reading in on the side
If your intention is to understand the Holy Qur'an then go with the dictionary/vocabulary of the Qur'an and side by side start with Madinah Arabic Books 1, 2 & 3 for learning grammar which will help you in understanding the construction of sentences. Although you won't be able to speak or converse fluently but you will definitely be able understand the Holy Qur'an to a great extent. I am saying that from my own experience...😊
@@Ayyan-e6x very good question akhee , I’m a big believer in not spreading yourself to thin , as in not taking on multiple things at once , I would personally rather focus on one thing and get to a good level in one thing than be bad at five things , that being said - I do think that learning Arabic and memorising the Quraan go hand in hand , they will aid each other inshaaAllah, the better your Arabic is then the more you understand the Quraan and the easier it is to memorise - also the better your Quraan is in terms of your reading ability and your pronunciation then the easier it will be to hit the ground running with Arabic , and at the end of the day these 2 things (Arabic and memorising Quraan ) are very very important and form a strong foundation However we have to acknowledge that these 2 things in particular are 2 huge tasks to accomplish , if I really had to pick one and there was no other option then I would choose learning the Arabic language because I would rather understand the Quraan than have it memorised by heart and not understand what I’m saying - but that is not ideal obviously- so I would say if your life circumstances allow you to equally balance between both then do both but if not then I would say lean more towards leaning Arabic but without abandoning memorising the Quraan even if it’s a little , I would do this especially in the beginning stages until you become stronger in the language and you can step off the gas abit and at that point you should be understanding more of the Quraan which will make it easier to memorise and you will have been slowly training your ability to memorise getting it stronger whilst you was learning Arabic Apologies for the long reply but this question was particularly important to me because it’s something I have struggled with and continue to struggle with myself , may Allah grant us all success to learn the Arabic language and memorise the Quraan - Aameen
If you want to learn Arabic then just drop me an email - ismaaeelarabic@gmail.com
I would love be able to help as many of you as possible inshaaAllah
I'm a new revert... I'm not sure if I'm doing things the right way around. I've learned the alphabet and am now able to read quran. Thats take about 4 months. I learned just to read but not comprehension. Do you help women?
Sheikh, what you stated is absolutely correct. You described EXACTLY how i struggled to learn Arabic. It was not easy but very rewarding afterwards. Jzkhairan🎉
Mashallah, your words are spot on Sidi. Became Muslim 7 years ago, it’s been seven years of “oh I should learn Arabic”. Alhamdulillah I’ve been putting in effort lately and seeing results (helps to have married an Arab) but a lot of time I should have benefited from
@@georgeshafilethbridge7186 the main thing is you’ve started now , I’m glad your seeing results alhamdulillah may Allah grant you success brother , and yeh being married to an Arab is gona help for sure man 👊🏻
I like your approach no sugar coating straight to the point 💯✨
@@TechVaultHub appreciate it akhee 👊🏻💜baarakAllahu feek
I've gone through the medina books 1-3. On my last lesson in book 3, alhamdulillah!. It's taken me many years (can't remember its been that long now). But I chipped away at it slowly, finding time here and there. Its possible to do it, but you got to persevere. I'm by no means an expert but reading the Quran now is more enjoyable/interesting and It's opening up to me slowly.
@@sfsf4372 allahumma baarik, that’s it perseverance is key , keep it up this is just the beginning 👍🏻💪🏻
There students at my mosque that learn to resd the Quran easily in 8 months but the actual language is really hard im lesrning more and more everyday its a good place to start memorizing all letters im not even close to done but i wont stop until i learn it like i know English May Allah bless u
@@Infernotheflame may Allah grant you success
Thanks for the videos! They are very helpful Alhamdulillah.
السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته Akhi,
I am also a revert, جزاك اللهُ خيرًا for this video, this is something that was needed
@@Hxssino وعليكم السلام ورحمة الله وبركاته
May Allah keep you firm upon his religion my brother , and thank you for the comment I appreciate it
JazaAllahu khairan. Been trying to learn arabic but often fall out along the way for about 5times now. But of recent, i have made up my mind and praying Allah help me get through this journey. Working, married, having kids and patents to look after are what keeps me busy, that not an axcuse though.
@@jibrintumaka3478 wa jazaak, it might not be easy but it is definitely doable bi ithnillah, may Allah grant you success
Subhanallah very well said ❤
WaAlaikum Assalam WaRahmatullah WaBarakatuh
I’m learning. And appreciate your encouragement.
@@SKY-qf8qq , I appreciate your comment , Allah grant you success
It’s been half a year now since I’ve started this journey with Arabic language and I know it’s gonna take years for me just to get on a train.Discipline and consistency are the key factors to succeed in this world and the next.
for encouragement بارك الله فيك
@@МирзаМирзамагомедов-щ9э may Allah bless you my brother and grant you success - Aameen
Keep on going and you will achieve your goal inshaaAllah, sometimes you might think that you aren’t making any progress but that’s just how Arabic is it’s really subtle but then before you know it your are able to understand the Quraan , sunnah , books of the scholars , conversations etc , keep me updated with your journey and if you need any help just let me know inshaaAllah
Masha Allah..
﷽
وعلَیکم السلام ورحمة اللّٰه وبرکاته
Asalamu alaykum wa rahmatullahi wa barakatu! JazakAllahu khayr wa barakAllahu feek! As an ethnic Arab who grew up in the West, unfortunately, I am separated from my heritage native language and only more familiar with the colloquial 'Ummi' tongue of northern Sham. It sucks to understand parts of what is being read or heard but not be able to completely comprehend everything or replicate it. I have tried to study Modern Standard Arabic a couple of times but found the lack of motivation and external competing commitments to be detrimental to success. What you said about it being a long journey and requiring devotion and steadfastness is so true. It really takes prioritising your faith and goal in life. Sometimes Allah subhanahu was ta3ala forces or rather guides you towards learning his Deen. May Allah a3za wajal reward and guide you and all of us with Jannatul Firdows.
@@phoenixknight8837 It’s cool you are familiar with your dialect though allahuma baarik, I don’t speak any dialects but I wish I could haha
Thankyou for your comment and your du’aa , may Allah bless you are grant you success to learn the language of the Quraan and sunnah - Aameen
Mashallah looking forward to more videos
بارك الله فيك
@@MrPsychologie وفيك بارك
Great video Akhi , keep dropping ✨🤲🏽✅
@@FryingPany appreciate it akhee 💜👊🏻 I will do inshaaAllah, baarakAllahu feek
You are straight to the point, I was born in Muslim family but yet I know nothing about arabic. I am trying to put effort but me and my shaytan is helping me not to . But I am still hopeful.
@@yeasirarafat1003 the main thing is your trying akhee, may Allah grant you success, if your struggling to be consistent with it then start small and build up , get into a habit of 20mins per day until your consistent and then slowly build it up to whatever is doable for you in your life circumstances , don’t give up akhee , keep on fighting your own soul and the shaytaan , it’s worth it 👊🏻💪🏻💜
Barakallah feek
@@Mim-ww3cp wa feeka baarak
Really helpful video
@@taylorcooke5362 baarakAllahu feek akhee
السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته. ما شاء الله, تبارك الله. لا حول ولا قوة إلا بالله. جزاك اللهُ خيراً. السلام عليكم.
@@A.S.M_Thank_You_Allah وعليكم السلام ورحمة الله وبركاته ، وجزاك
one important point is; stay away from sins.
السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته
This is great Baarak Allahu Feek brother the ups and downs on with the studies of arabic and the voices of people saying 6-10 months then you sit there in your room in the west after 10 months of everyday work and you feel like you stupid for not being a poet that spits lines of poetry. We hear all these 1 year to learn courses but it's funny that almost 99% of students drop out showing that it is not a 1 year thing.
@@whakamoko وعليكم السلام ورحمة الله
Exactly brother I agree with you 100%, keep putting in the work and you will see the results inshaaAllah, may Allah grant you success , there is without doubt going to be ups and downs but make du’aa and keep on striving my brother , keep me updated on your journey inshaaAllah , baarakAllahu feek
As-salāmu ʿalaykum wa raḥmatu Llāhi wa barakātuh
Nice Turban. Where is it from
Great video bro :) Lets collab akhy in shaa Allah if you're down for an interview ?
@@Anglo-IslamicGentleman cheers bro appreciate it 💜👊🏻, yeh course let’s do it inshaaAllah
I needed to hear this, I’m already studying at a pretty good institute but I put too much pressure on myself to see big results by now when it’s only been months
Brother could you please make a video talking about what to do outside of the lessons. Things like going listening to Arabic videos to help, and ways to practice. Sometimes even tho I’m doing the lessons and memorising vocabulary and grammar rules, I still find myself stuck with what else I should put in my routine and how much of it if that makes sense. Honestly even if you could make an entire video talking about how to go about studying from start to finish and then also include what I mentioned that would be great
BarakAllahu feek!
The place I study also offers practicing speaking and what we learn with teachers and other students 2-4hours a week but I still feel like there’s more I can do since I’ve got a lot of free time
@@Unknownn-q70 Thankyou for your comment that’s exactly what I plan on doing 👊🏻💜 inshaaAllah
@@Unknownn-q70 I’m going to be making videos specifically about what to do outside of lesson time inshaaAllah , I would argue that what you do outside of the lesson is what really makes or breaks you
@@IsmaaeelMeehan 100% there was a student of knowledge that said 2 men went to Egypt to study Arabic, did the same course and everything and one of them it was like he didn’t succeed meanwhile the other did meaning he was able to speak, understand and everything at a fluent level and the other couldn’t even speak. and the difference was that the one who did succeed used what he learned outside of the lessons and would practice! And If I remember correctly I think the one who didn’t succeed went Egypt before the other one but he just wasn’t practicing and applying anything he picked up.
At the beginning of the video you mentioned it’s important to make Arabic a lifestyle, a person will never do that if they don’t have the craziest thirst to learn the language, like it really needs to feel like something that a person can’t live without. Because if you don’t have that hunger to learn the language doing more and more outside of the lessons isn’t possible
Best way to get that hunger for it is listening to a bunch of videos or even reading things about the importance of Arabic, what you’re missing out on without Arabic etc.
@@Unknownn-q70 exactly , couldn’t of said it better myself
hello, i have madina arabic reader book 1 and 2. i also have two journals that one is for writing vocabulary and the other is easy grammar and arabic short stories. i am really unsure for what other method to use to improve my arabic any advice?
@@Cagzstar I’m going to be making videos specifically about this very soon inshaaAllah
conversation or grammer first? To understand Quran?
@@463949 vocab in general is good at first , if by grammar you are meaning things like the madinah books and by conversation things like bayna yadayk then I would say it depends on your learning style and your overall approach to the language, some people like to learn the technicalities of the language where as others prefer to learn vocab and be able to have a conversation, either way they are both going to be helpful as long as you are getting enough listening and reading in on the side
If your intention is to understand the Holy Qur'an then go with the dictionary/vocabulary of the Qur'an and side by side start with Madinah Arabic Books 1, 2 & 3 for learning grammar which will help you in understanding the construction of sentences. Although you won't be able to speak or converse fluently but you will definitely be able understand the Holy Qur'an to a great extent. I am saying that from my own experience...😊
@Miap65556 OK. JazakAllah
Akhi would you say memorising the Quran should be done first or learning the Arabic language?
@@Ayyan-e6x very good question akhee , I’m a big believer in not spreading yourself to thin , as in not taking on multiple things at once , I would personally rather focus on one thing and get to a good level in one thing than be bad at five things , that being said - I do think that learning Arabic and memorising the Quraan go hand in hand , they will aid each other inshaaAllah,
the better your Arabic is then the more you understand the Quraan and the easier it is to memorise - also the better your Quraan is in terms of your reading ability and your pronunciation then the easier it will be to hit the ground running with Arabic , and at the end of the day these 2 things (Arabic and memorising Quraan ) are very very important and form a strong foundation
However we have to acknowledge that these 2 things in particular are 2 huge tasks to accomplish , if I really had to pick one and there was no other option then I would choose learning the Arabic language because I would rather understand the Quraan than have it memorised by heart and not understand what I’m saying - but that is not ideal obviously- so I would say if your life circumstances allow you to equally balance between both then do both but if not then I would say lean more towards leaning Arabic but without abandoning memorising the Quraan even if it’s a little , I would do this especially in the beginning stages until you become stronger in the language and you can step off the gas abit and at that point you should be understanding more of the Quraan which will make it easier to memorise and you will have been slowly training your ability to memorise getting it stronger whilst you was learning Arabic
Apologies for the long reply but this question was particularly important to me because it’s something I have struggled with and continue to struggle with myself , may Allah grant us all success to learn the Arabic language and memorise the Quraan - Aameen
@@IsmaaeelMeehan Jazakallah khayr akhi really needed this👍
@@Ayyan-e6xwa jazaak yaa akhee 💜
cup tea, lad?