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🎉 Welcome / Bienvenue
As-salāmu ʿalaykum wa raḥmatullāhi wa barakātuh, Welcome to the official (bilingual) Arabic Accelerator community. This space brings together learners who share a serious intention:to understand the Quran in its original language with clarity, method, and consistency. This group exists to: - Support students of the Arabic Accelerator program - Answer questions related to learning Qur’anic Arabic - Provide guidance, clarification, and accountability - Host discussions, reflections, and live Q&A sessions Important: the actual course, lessons, and structured learning are hosted outside Skool on our dedicated learning platform.This community complements the program, it does not replace it. If you are enrolled in Arabic Accelerator, you are in the right place. Use this group to: - Ask questions when something feels unclear - Share insights or breakthroughs - Stay consistent and connected to the learning process If you are exploring or curious: You are welcome to observe, ask general questions, and learn more about the program. To understand the full curriculum or enroll, visit:👉 https://arabicaccelerator.com How to get started here Please introduce yourself by creating a short post: - Your name - Your country - Your background or profession - Your goal with Quranic Arabic This helps build a focused and respectful learning environment. May Allah place barakah in our efforts, grant us sincerity, and make this knowledge a means of closeness to Him. Ossama Hamdi
🎉 Welcome / Bienvenue
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Arabic Accelerator ⚡️ : 10 conseils pour rester régulier & réussir
J'ai reçu beaucoup de retours positifs concernant "Arabic Accelerator" et je vous en remercie🙂. Toutefois, certains membres éprouvent des difficultés à rester réguliers dans leur apprentissage. Voici quelques conseils : 1. Rappelez-vous systématiquement l'enjeu de votre apprentissage : il s'agit de vous rapprocher du Coran dans sa forme originelle. Et c'est juste énorme. Les bénéfices que vous allez pouvoir tirer de vos efforts sont incommensurables et indénombrables. Il y a t-il une meilleure façon de passer son temps libre ? Sans compter le fait que vous allez affûter vos capacités intellectuelles, de par le niveau et la qualité des leçons. 2. Si le point n°1 est acquis, le "manque de temps" est une excuse. Vous trouverez le temps qu'il faudra. Quitte à réduire celui que vous passez quotidiennement dans les réseaux sociaux, devant votre série préférée, avec votre cercle d'amis, ou chez vous à ne rien faire de productif et constructif. 3. Soyez absolument résolu, imparital et inébranlable pour atteindre votre objectif. Dites à vos proches que vous serez occupé et indisponible. Mettez votre téléphone en mode avion ou éteignez-le. Fermez vos fenêtres. Rien ne devra distraire votre apprentissage. Toute votre attention devra être focalisée sur la leçon que vous suivez. Combattez vos pensées et vos tentations à l'idée de couper cours aux leçons, car je vous garantis que vous en aurez (petite faim, pause Instagram/youtube, rangement, nettoyage, etc.). Eliminez ce qui est dérisoire. 4. Le secret pour être concentré et productif : ne portez votre attention que sur une seule chose à la fois. Mettez de côté absolument tout le reste. Si vous suivez les cours pendant que vous cuisinez, que vous regardez votre téléphone, ou autre, vous ne tirerez aucun bénéfice de votre apprentissage. Le contenu des leçons est de haute voltige, et requiert toute votre attention. Si il y a du bruit autour de vous ou aux alentours, investissez dans un casque antibruit. 5. J'utilise au quotidien à titre personnel "Google Calendar", où j'enregistre mes rendez-vous perso, tâches, objectifs, etc. C'est simple et efficace. Pas besoin de plus. Je vous invite à faire de même, et à fixer 1 voire idéalement 2 créneaux par semaine dans votre agenda. Activez les notifications de rappels. Ces créneaux seront consacrés exclusivement à "Arabic Accelerator".
Arabic Accelerator ⚡️ : 10 conseils pour rester régulier & réussir
Why Learning Arabic Feels So Hard
If you’ve ever found yourself thinking, “Why is Arabic so hard to learn?” — you’re not alone. For many students, learning Arabic feels like hitting a wall. Despite motivation and discipline, progress can feel slow and frustrating. But there’s a deeper reason for this that most language programs never explain. It has to do with something few learners are ever taught: Arabic belongs to a completely different language family than English. This single fact changes everything. 1. The Linguistic Leap: Indo-European vs. Afro-Asiatic. Most of you grew up speaking languages from the Indo-European family: English, French, Spanish, German, Urdu, Hindi, and many more. These languages share deep similarities in grammar, vocabulary, and sentence structure — even when they sound different. Arabic, on the other hand, belongs to the Afro-Asiatic language family. It’s an entirely different linguistic world. The way meaning is constructed, how grammar operates, and even how words are formed, it all functions according to different internal rules (see the attached picture to learn what that means in practice). Learning Arabic, then, isn’t like learning French or Spanish. It’s not just new vocabulary: it’s a new paradigme. 2. The Big Picture: Why the Struggle is Normal Imagine switching from Windows to Linux, not just using a new app, but changing how your entire operating system works. That’s what it’s like to go from English to Arabic. Many students feel like they’re failing when really, they’re making a major cognitive leap across language systems. And here’s the truth: That struggle is expected. And it’s the sign of deep growth — not failure. 3. Why Most Arabic Courses Fall Short : Most Arabic programs are designed with surface-level memorization in mind. They teach isolated words, basic phrases, and short dialogues — without explaining how the Arabic language system actually works. But without understanding the root-pattern system. Without grasping how Arabic builds meaning from a core triliteral root.
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Why Learning Arabic Feels So Hard
"Commence ici"
@Ossama Hamdi Salam aleykoum wa rahmatullah wa barakatuhu. I don't remember the video "commence ici" the first time I logged in the training course. I've just watched it. I've been very impressed by the accuracy of the speech. It helps. Barak'Allah oufik.
The discipline that no one sees
There’s a kind of discipline that makes no noise. Not the kind you post online. Not the kind that earns applause. But the kind that only Allah sees — and rewards. It’s the effort to draw closer to the Qur’an... 📖 When you’re tired. 🕯️ When you’re not feeling “spiritual.” 🕵️‍♂️ When no one else is watching. ❓ Or when you’re not even sure you’re progressing. This quiet, hidden consistency — that no one applauds — is what builds a real connection with the Book of Allah. Understanding the Qur’an — truly grasping its language and message — doesn’t come from a magical breakthrough. But rather from small, regular acts of presence. Throughout a lifelong journey. Quietly. Steadily. That’s the kind of momentum we nurture inside Arabic Accelerator. Not by overwhelming you — but by offering a clear framework, spiritual motivation, and structure...To help you keep moving, without burning out. If deep down you know you want to lean toward that goal... 👉 Have a look at Arabic Accelerator. And even if you don’t join — remember this: Allah sees what no one else sees. And the hidden actions done with sincerity? They never go unnoticed. May Allah make us all among the people of the Qur’an. Sincerely, Ossama
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