Monday, May 9, 2016

ARABIC FOR BEGINNERS

ARABIC FOR BEGINNERS

I have always loved the sound of Arabic speech, Qur'anic recitation and even Arabic music. I think it is the world's most fascinating language. This love for the language made me intent on learning to read and speak Arabic. But learning Arabic has always been very difficult for me. 

Learning Arabic started out with a most embarrassing moment in my life. I was already a young  adult, a newly-wed, an electronics engineering graduate attending a Qur'an reading / conversational course for beginners for the very first time. But bear with me and allow me to fill you in about what happened prior to this event.

In my late teens whilst attending high school, I never really had time to attend Madrassa (Islamic school) or rather it wasn't a priority in my life at the time  due to commuting to and from schools, doing an insane amount of mandatory homework daily and studying over weekends. It was all about doing well at school. I was very studious and was always in the top five students in my class throughout my schooling career.

Being busy continued throughout the entire duration of high school and  perpetuated whiles studying electronic engineering, up to an including securing my first job. In a nutshell, I excelled secularly and academically but at the expense of my Islamic education which I now profusely regret. 

Looking back to my early teens whilst  I attended primary school, I religiously attended Madrassa, learnt the basic tenets of Islam and even attended a very elementary Arabic reading class. But I really struggled with Arabic and I think I may have even had mild dyslexia because I had extreme difficulty differentiating between similar looking Arabic characters. Nothing Arabic would stay inside my head and I even sounded dumb even though I was an ace student academically. 

However, during all this time, my parents felt that my Arabic progress was extremely slow, so thinking it was the teacher's inability to explain / teach, they  enrolled me in a different Madressa, and with a new Madrassa and a new teacher came a new learning /teaching system. So I had to start with the ABC's once again. 

This scenario played it self out a few times and as a consequence found myself in a different Madrassa every few months but not learning anything. The frustration of struggling and not understanding the Arabic script, further stymied by the different teaching methods used at so many Madrassas drove me to quit absolutely. 

But at the back of my mind, my intention always was to resume Arabic some day in the near future because my love for the language has never abated. That day came finally arrived, while I was just recently wed. I was excited and hyped up about learning Arabic once more. The Qur'an reading course for beginners was fairly well attended and I found myself  seated in the last row, only because of the enthusiasm displayed by my fellow students. 

As classes progressed, I accessed my understanding /reading abilities against that of my fellow beginners and realized that's  exactly were I belonged - right at the back of the class. I struggled for weeks but I endured until our Ustadh (teacher) compelled me to read the Arabic written on the blackboard aloud, to the rest of the class. I don't know why our ustadh picked on me because I really wasn't ready to do this. 

After declining several times, I was urged on by the rest of the class and by our Ustadh. I finally succumbed and stood up, opened my mouth and made an absolute fool of myself that even my Ustadh was shacking with laughter. No self respecting rainbow would have looked brighter and more colourful than me at that very moment.

I felt as if I was standing naked but had no place to hide my shame. I felt ridiculed and all the intentions I had of learning Arabic; and all the confidence I started off with, vanished in a spit second, laughed right out of me. 

Thereafter my quest for Islamic knowledge and learning the Arabic language was a very lonely one and to arrive there, I spared no expense since I was determined to master it. It has been a life-long  passion that I left off for way too long. So after several years of self study and several dozens of books and audio courses I finally grasped a working knowledge of the Arabic language, sufficiently to share it with others who may have also struggled with Arabic as well. 

I decided to put it in e-book form and make it available on the internet. I grappled with a name for this e-book, amongst which are Simply Arabic / Simplified Classical Arabic, Classical Arabic demystified, Classical Arabic clarified, Instant Arabic, Instantaneous Arabic, Painless Classical  Arabic, Effortless Classical Arabic, Classical Arabic made Easy, Easy Classical Arabic,  Classical Arabic with ease, Natural Classical Arabic, Express Classical Arabic, Classical Arabic complexities Debunked and  Classical  Arabic complexities Exposed. 

However, after much self deliberation I decided to release it as a blog with a difference. I decided to make all the meat and potatoes downloadable as flash cards of exactly the same size which can be used for easy reference by whoever wants to learn Arabic easily and quickly.

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