top of page
MAZ Advertisements (Banner Landscape) (4).png

What if 10 weeks from now, you could write your first Arabic sentences with confidence, even with zero knowledge of Arabic?

Attempting to learn, but never getting anywhere​

 

A lot of sisters attempt to learn Arabic through methods that look helpful on the surface but in reality, don’t build anything solid.

 

Random vocab lists, scattered videos, grammar explained without context, and no clear progression from one step to the next. It feels like learning, but it rarely turns into the ability to form sentences and if it does, without guidance from a teacher, it takes longer than it should.

Collecting more information and more resources is not what will improve your Arabic ability. A better way is taking a structured path that shows you how the language fits together from the beginning. Step by step, developing your sentence building becomes natural rather than confusing.

If you don’t know how words connect, how do you form anything meaningful? If you’re never shown the structure of a sentence from the start, how are you meant to build your own? And if every lesson feels disconnected from the next, when does it ever start to make sense as a language rather than separate pieces?

And over time it just leaves you feeling like you’re constantly trying to learn, yet never actually able to build anything.

 

The best way to approach learning Arabic

 Guidance with a teacher, and a structured method that removes the guesswork, builds everything step by step, and focuses from the very beginning on how sentences are formed in Arabic without even having the burden of learning the letters all at once. When you follow a clear progression like what we offer, everything starts to make sense and you begin to see this beautiful language as a system that you can actually begin to use.

 

Introducing....Mastering Arabic for Beginners

So, if you’re ready for Arabic to stop feeling “hard”, and see how it all fits together instead of random vocab lists, disconnected lessons, and a whole lot of guessing. This course changes all of that. We take the first 8 lessons of Mastering Arabic and move through them in order, slowly and clearly, so you actually see how sentences are built from the ground up. One lesson a week for 10 weeks, focused on getting you from zero to the point where you can form and write simple Arabic sentences without feeling lost.

What's in the course?

🕖 Live Class: Every Monday & Friday at 7pm -8pm EST
Only $180 USD for 10 weeks of live learning!

Start Date 8th June, 2026

 

Each lesson follows a simple principle: Arabic is learned through use, not isolation. Letters are taught in their natural groups so you start to see how they change depending on where they appear in a word, and grammar is introduced only when it is needed so it immediately becomes something you can apply, not just memorise.

Unit 1: Greetings
You start with vowels and the most essential expressions, so from the very beginning you can recognise how Arabic actually sounds and functions in real speech.

Unit 2: Introductions
You begin putting words together into real sentences, learning how to introduce yourself in a way that feels complete rather than fragmented or memorised.

Unit 3: The Family
Masculine and feminine forms are introduced naturally alongside family vocabulary, so you start to see how Arabic changes depending on who you are talking about.

Unit 4: Jobs
Personal pronouns are introduced in a practical way through real sentences about work, making them easier to remember because you are using them immediately, not just studying them.

Unit 5: Describing Things
You learn how to ask for what you want using haadha and haadhihi, and laam at-ta’reef is introduced so you can start forming proper descriptive sentences instead of single words.

Unit 6: Where is it?
Furniture and room vocabulary is combined with describing position, along with yes/no questions using hal, so you can start asking and answering real location-based questions.

Unit 7: Describing Places
You learn how to say hunaak and laysa hunaak and use basic directions, giving you the ability to describe simple environments and locations clearly.

Throughout the course, students are required to send written and spoken practice into a WhatsApp group, where learning is supported through feedback, accountability, and shared progress with fellow students.

The real value of what you're getting

A structured Arabic foundation like this is normally taught privately, one-to-one, because it relies on correction, speaking practice, and guided progression. That kind of personal tuition can easily cost hundreds for a short block of lessons, especially when you’re being taken from absolute beginner to sentence-building with real feedback and accountability.

And to understand the value of this properly, it helps to zoom out.

For most learners taking the traditional route, getting to the point where they can confidently write simple Arabic sentences doesn’t happen in weeks. It usually takes months, sometimes years of disconnected study, switching between resources, revisiting the same grammar repeatedly, and still feeling unsure when it comes to actually forming their own sentences.

And it’s not because they aren’t trying, but because there’s no clear, structured progression that takes them from letters → words → sentences in a controlled way.

By the time most people reach that point on their own, they’ve spent far more time, far more energy, and often far more money trying to piece everything together themselves.

 

This programme compresses that journey into 10 guided weeks with a clear path from the first 8 lessons of Mastering Arabic into real sentence writing, step by step, without the guesswork that usually stretches the process out for months or years.

The goal here was never exclusivity. It was access.

So instead of limiting it to private sessions, it has been structured into a guided 10-week program that anyone can follow, with clear weekly progression, built-in speaking and writing practice.

What's possible when you take this course?

Here's just one example of two students from our most recent cohort and Alhamdulilah, this result has been repeated many times using this curriculum!​​​

WhatsApp Image 2026-06-02 at 14.09.01.jpeg
WhatsApp Image 2026-06-02 at 14.09.24.jpeg

Before

After

What students have said:

“This course has been an eye opener and an encouragement for moving forward based on the pace of the course as well as the format where coursework was presented and tackled in groups. (Thus) far this approach has been the most beneficial and easiest approach. It was refreshing and very informative. Alhamdulilah”

 

“Alhamdulilah the overall units as a whole have improved Word recognition and the ability to actually form and read sentences. (I was) unable to do both (reading and writing)  prior to this course.”

 

Imagine a few months from now...

where Arabic no longer feels like a wall you keep hitting, but something you can begin to use. You open a page and instead of feeling overwhelmed, you start recognising patterns, building simple sentences, and slowly realising you can actually write things yourself without translating everything in your head.

And now imagine the opposite. You’re still collecting resources, still watching videos, still telling yourself you’ll “get serious soon,” but nothing ever really clicks. Words stay disconnected. Sentences still feel out of reach. And Arabic stays exactly where it has always been: something you understand in pieces, but never in full.

The difference between those two futures isn’t intelligence or time. It’s whether there’s a clear path that actually takes you from the beginning to sentence building in a way that makes sense.

 

What are you waiting for?

Abu Hurairah narrated that the Messenger of Allah, peace be upon him, said:

"Rush to do good deeds.”

 

Ibn Abbas reported: The Messenger of Allah, peace and blessings be upon him, said, “Take advantage of five before five: your youth before your old age, your health before your illness, your riches before your poverty, your free time before your work, and your life before your death.”​​

Arabic is more than just learning a new language...

Learning Arabic isn’t just “a skill upgrade”: it changes your entire relationship with the Deen. And the discomfort many people feel right now often comes from realising how much has been missed by not understanding it earlier.

Here are some of the real benefits, without sugarcoating it:

  • You stop relying fully on translations and start engaging with the Qur’an as it was revealed, even at a basic level

  • You begin to recognise words in salah instead of feeling mentally disconnected during recitation

  • You understand core meanings of duʿā and adhkār instead of repeating sounds without presence

  • You gain access to the language of revelation, not just interpretations layered on top of it

  • You start noticing patterns in the Qur’an that you would have otherwise completely missed

  • You feel less dependent on explanations and more directly connected to the text itself

  • You reduce the gap between hearing Qur’an and actually understanding what is being said

  • You begin to feel a sense of ownership over your worship, instead of feeling like an outsider to the language

  • You move from passive listening to active understanding, even if slowly at first

  • You open the door to deeper study of tafsir, because the language stops being a barrier

And maybe the hardest truth:

  • Remaining disconnected is not neutral :it slowly normalises not understanding the very words you repeat in worship every day

bottom of page