How To Learn Arabic?

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  • čas přidán 11. 12. 2018
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Komentáře • 70

  • @alamin3000
    @alamin3000 Před 5 lety +84

    "Don't talk about [it] too much, just do it". Great last words

  • @mxhsin6580
    @mxhsin6580 Před 5 lety +33

    I really benefited from the simple and raw advice. Jazakallah khair. :)

  • @shahid8545
    @shahid8545 Před 5 lety +19

    If you really want it you will do it especially with the internet these days. No excuses.

  • @BecomeArabized
    @BecomeArabized Před 5 lety +27

    That was the best and simplest answer i heard so far!

    • @JoBlogz
      @JoBlogz Před 2 měsíci

      salam. what did you like so much?

  • @abdul-hadidadkhah1459
    @abdul-hadidadkhah1459 Před 2 lety +5

    Need to watch this before every Arabic lesson you start.

  • @y_4683
    @y_4683 Před 5 lety +15

    Jazkhallah Khairun to you and your team. Your videos have been so useful. Mufti Q&A marathon while I study for exams lol. I made a study plan for myself based of off your videos. It was mainly based on Arabic grammar. However, now I have to focus on vocab like you mentioned in the video. I currently listen to Arabic lectures, focus my attention on reading arabic text before reading the translation. However, I don't like the feeling of being ignorant of certain words. But, like you said just do it and give it time. MUFTI MUNEER HAS TAUGHT ME: My gender does not limit me nor does my location, I have to be hungry for it, and lastly but not least, don't talk the talk, walk the walk!

  • @MO9ALA7
    @MO9ALA7 Před 5 lety +5

    May Allah increase goodness for u in this world and hereafter 😍 and every one watching this ?🤩

  • @abdullahgonzalez3531
    @abdullahgonzalez3531 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you very much for your sincere advice.

  • @bintarchetype
    @bintarchetype Před 3 lety +2

    So inspiring Wallahi. May Allah bless Mufti abundantly!!!

  • @sarinahpape4569
    @sarinahpape4569 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks! Alhamdulillah!

  • @englishMi7
    @englishMi7 Před 5 lety +2

    Barak Allah Feek

  • @drirm1400
    @drirm1400 Před 2 lety +2

    Barakallahu fikum

  • @starsighting7167
    @starsighting7167 Před 5 lety +5

    I love this channel so much

  • @toddarcher3920
    @toddarcher3920 Před 5 lety +2

    Good stuff akhi

  • @sannasamateh7268
    @sannasamateh7268 Před rokem

    Thanks from Africa

  • @Moses-jo5ox
    @Moses-jo5ox Před 5 lety

    Alhamdulilah

  • @dahoodmusa3714
    @dahoodmusa3714 Před 2 lety +1

    Alhamdulillah

  • @TheeAliBros
    @TheeAliBros Před 5 lety

    Good Arabic session

  • @ahmedhussein1509
    @ahmedhussein1509 Před 2 lety

    jazzakkallah khayr shiekh may allah forgive you for your sins reward you for your good deeds and grant you jannah al firdaus in the akhira

  • @adnanebia1437
    @adnanebia1437 Před 4 lety

    الله الموفق

  • @saynotoracism8613
    @saynotoracism8613 Před 4 lety +1

    My mufti

  • @dahoodmusa3714
    @dahoodmusa3714 Před 2 lety +1

    Allahu Akbar

  • @strivingslave5962
    @strivingslave5962 Před měsícem

    1:03 Begins and ends with your mindset.
    Every time we took a step, Allah helped us
    Lack of pleasure of ignorance
    3:42 All they had to do was enter the gates
    4:00 Practical Steps:
    Why?
    Seek knowledge

  • @Omar-Asim
    @Omar-Asim Před 5 lety +1

    Is this from the HD UK Tour 2018? Hope the full lecture will be uploaded.

    • @ia1399
      @ia1399 Před 5 lety

      The lecture won't be publicly available as there was problems with its sound. Sorry for that.

    • @Omar-Asim
      @Omar-Asim Před 5 lety +1

      @@ia1399 That's a shame.

    • @ia1399
      @ia1399 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Omar-Asim Akhi they uploaded the lecture. If you are still interested here is the link czcams.com/video/Kc5vxeeswE0/video.html

    • @Omar-Asim
      @Omar-Asim Před 4 lety +1

      @@ia1399 Wow, thank you very much for getting back to me after all this time. I'll make sure to add it to my playlist and watch it. I remember the livestream of this not working. May Allah reward you for your time and effort.

    • @ia1399
      @ia1399 Před 3 lety

      @@Omar-Asim Ameen

  • @Moses-jo5ox
    @Moses-jo5ox Před 5 lety

    Cheerio 👋

  • @abdalaliydesert5576
    @abdalaliydesert5576 Před 5 lety +1

    Any advise on a vocab book for beginners. With harakat

    • @ia1399
      @ia1399 Před 5 lety

      Medina Arabic have a good vocab list on their website online.

    • @abdalaliydesert5576
      @abdalaliydesert5576 Před 5 lety

      Ibrahim Ali barakAllahu feek akhi

    • @ia1399
      @ia1399 Před 5 lety

      @@abdalaliydesert5576 wa feeka barakallah

    • @abuahmad1788
      @abuahmad1788 Před 5 lety

      You can buy Arabic children books very good

  • @Abdul-doesitdude
    @Abdul-doesitdude Před 3 měsíci

    Mashallah you're sweater says "HAD." How old was she? lol

  • @abuumar193
    @abuumar193 Před 5 lety +6

    how can i buy the merch?

    • @ia1399
      @ia1399 Před 5 lety

      www.hadithdiscipleshop.com/

  • @ubermensche60
    @ubermensche60 Před 5 lety +3

    Salam Alykum Ustad,
    Hope youre doing well and May Allah bless you.
    So I had a question about basic Arabic elementary level books. I am looking for the kind where it teaches rhyming words, nouns, short stories for kids, etc. Is it possible if you could share some ya sheikh?
    Jazakumullahu Khairan Ustad.

    • @ia1399
      @ia1399 Před 5 lety +2

      Akhi ask him in His q&a livestreams on hadith disciple you can send him an email at muftihadith@gmail.com

    • @muhammedfahad8570
      @muhammedfahad8570 Před rokem

      Wa Alaikum Assalam
      كيف الحال اليوم، لعل بخير.
      I suggest strongly that you do madinah books and imam saud books. Alot of vocabulary in there. Any school books you may find on al3arabiya
      If you don't know how to read or write than check out imran Alwiye's playlist.
      Or Dr Vaniya Abdul Raheem's website has a book as well.
      May Allah allow us to learn arabic
      Jazakallah.

  • @baddmanaz
    @baddmanaz Před 5 lety +1

    Let there be no more arguments as to how iraq (eye-rack) is supposed to be pronounced!

  • @rifisnotmorocco
    @rifisnotmorocco Před 2 lety

    You don’t need Arabic to understand Islam. This Arab-and Islamic fascism has gone too far in the 80 and 90. Nowadays we have translations very good translations.
    In the Levent they speak Arabic and good Arabic, but stil they see and interpret the Koran and Islam very differently.
    Ask yourself: do want to be an Arab or do you want to be Muslim.
    Do you want to understand Islam or understand Arabic.
    I’am curious does this African man speak his mother language?

    • @haniimaan8861
      @haniimaan8861 Před 2 lety +2

      Firstly, Arabic how it is spoken in the levant is not the Arabic of the Quran nor is it the Arabic of the Prophet, the companions and nor is it the Arabic scholars used it writings. People in the levant and all over the Arabic speaking world today speak a dialect of Arabic that is far from the Arabic that many of us want to learn (classcial Arabic or FusHA). You can equate the dialects to modern romance languages like French, Spanish, Portuguese and Italian and Classical Arabic to Classical Latin. In Arabic speaking countries, kids are taught classical arabic or FusHa or Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) in schools. MSA is very very very different to dialectal Arabic because the Arabic dialects are mixed with different languages first and foremost (for example in the Levant and Iraq regions the dialect there is hevaily mixed with Sramaic, Syriac, and other languages that used to be spoken there before that area became arabized or before they spoke arabic (yes the levatn and Iraq were not always arabized), the North-West African region also known as the Magjreb dialect is said to be hard for other speakers to understand. Why? Because the dialect there is heavily mixed with Tamazight (indigenous north african language), French, and in some cases Spanish (like in certain parts of Morocco),some Hassaniya Arabic dialects are mixed with Wolof and Berber languages). On top of that, the grammar in the dialects are different to that in the classical arabic. The grammar is simplified and in some cases a phrase in one dialect can mean something else in another dialect. So you see the dialects, the arabic dialects (what people sue to communicate in everyday) are quite different to the standard one and also there are dialects that people cannot even understand each other.
      Classical Arabic also called Quranic Arabic is very different. It is a lot more grammatically challenging than the dialects. There are words in classical arabic that not all dialects use, classical arabic is also not spoken much by Arabic speaking people unless for certain purposes, no one speaks classical arabic as a mother tongue (they learn in it in school).
      It is best for us to learn the classical arabic despite having translations because the translations are not always correct, mistranslations do in fact happen. That is the first part. Secondly, there is great power in knowing what is being said in the Quran in the language of revelation (people do not even recite thier prayer in dialectal arabic).
      Another thing, learning classical arabic does not mean you are becoming an arab. What do I mean by this? Well classical arabic is an international language often associated heavily with Islamic studies. Classical Arabic has existed in african for over a thousand years and even the arabic script has been used in west africa to preserve indigenous african languages (look into Ajami script). Learning classical arabic is something that is used so we can penetrate the Quran and the Islamic texts, which people of many different ethnicities (Malians, Senegalese, Nigerians, Andalusians, Indians, Persians, Turks etc) have written in especially when writing Islamic texts or texts pertaining to Islam. On top of that, the Arabic language has roots to Africa, namely Northern Sudan and Southern Egypt because that area is where the afro-asiatic branch developed and from that branch we get Arabic.
      Since Levants, Iraqis and other arabized people can learn the arabic language, why can't everyone else who wishes to? I find absurd to discourage people from learning arabic when there are so much resources that are not even translated that are so relevant to our time and space, people you can communicate with even outside of the arab world like in west africa who are scholars of islam and they have great knowledge we can learn from. In addition, the scholars espeically in west Africa are very learned in their native tongue (whether it be Hausa, Fulani, Wolof, Bambara etc) as well as in Classical Arabic, therefore the usage of classical arabic also extends as a lingua franca amongst people who speak it whether they are arab or nt.
      The main use for classical arabic that many of us have is being able to learn more about islam directly from the source. A great issue is the limited amount of resources that are translated into other languages. if you wanted to translate something for someone, using a translation to translate further is not always the best idea because that could increase the chances of mistranslations. In addition, Classical Arabic (not dialectal) being rather intricate, proposes that there are words that do not have an exact translation into english, so if anyone would like to actually understand something fully, you would have to go straight to the source. i will give you one gret example, the arabic word, Sabr, is often translated nto english as patience. However, Sabr can also mean perseverance and resiliency, which these are translations that we do not see often.
      I think a great problem is associating classical arabic or FusHA with a people, and the reality is that classical arabic is not limited to a specific people group, rather it is for everyone who wants to learn it. When you see how vast Islam spread all the way into west africa, eastern congo, to southeast asian places like Indonesia to places like Europe and East Asia like China, you see that the classical arabic language followed suit as well, however the people remained their own ethnic group. Classical arabic should not be given access solely to levants (who they themselves were not even arab for a long time. many of them were Arameans and Phoenicians/canaanites, the levant people today are not replaced by arabs they are still related to the ancestal non-arab groups, they just adopted a different language). When we associate classical arabic with levantines we are wrongly making them the owners of the language which they are not, we are also preventing anyone else from learning the international language of classical arabic. Also, when Muslims used to rule over the Iberai peninsula (Spain and Portugal) Spaniards wanted to learn classical arabic over latin. Language is simply a means of communication. Also, many people learn classical arabic and do not become arab. You can look into the scholars and Muslims of Mali, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, the Muslims of Ghana, Senegal and the Muslims of the Gambia.
      I hope this helped and was beneficial in any possible way.

    • @sadikhassan6578
      @sadikhassan6578 Před 2 lety +1

      So you’re going to rely on people to always translate for you or take their word for what ever is said in something as important as your religion ? Just because you have a issue with Arabic what kind of logic is that brother

    • @rifisnotmorocco
      @rifisnotmorocco Před 2 lety

      @@sadikhassan6578 yes I will relay on translation. The issue is not Arabic but the fascism that goes /comes along with it. Apparently when you treat people like they treat you, they get upset.
      In the Levent they know their Arabic pretty well, but still among its people they understand / understand things completely different. ISIS and co read from the same Koran, see how they have interpreted it the last 10 years.

    • @sadikhassan6578
      @sadikhassan6578 Před 2 lety +2

      @@rifisnotmorocco You don’t wanna learn your religion because of your hate for Arabs very good logic 👍

    • @rifisnotmorocco
      @rifisnotmorocco Před 2 lety

      @@sadikhassan6578 to understand Islam you don’t need to waste your time in learning this ancient Arabic. Only when you are interested in becoming a teacher, Imam etc.
      In the 7th centuries and further invasions were the only methods available to spread the message. Now can walk to a local mosque anywhere in the world and pick up a copy of the Koran or any Islamic book you choose.
      Keep pushing Arab fascism..