By: Kaylah Cruz-Herrera
When
I began learning Arabic, one of the most intimidating aspects of the language
was the alphabet. The Arabic alphabet
has more letters than the English alphabet, no short vowels, connecting
letters, letters that never connect, and- the scariest- is read from right to
left. In Morocco, I mastered the Arabic
alphabet in two weeks. Unlike English
writing, Arabic is completely phonetic.
Now, I actually prefer writing in Arabic to writing in English. But, it wasn’t until I started learning
Arabic calligraphy that I really started to appreciate it.
The
CLC began offering calligraphy classes to NSLI-Y students in October. I have been in the class since the
beginning. At first, I hated it. I hated sitting in the class for two hours
writing “ب ب ب….” over and over while my teacher kept saying, “Slowly!
Slowly! لالا لا!!” It was frustrating. Calligraphy is demanding and requires a sharp
eye for the subtle differences between good and bad letters. Luckily, I have a good teacher.
He’s
been practicing calligraphy since before I was born and a master of the Moroccan style of
Arabic calligraphy. He’s also a little
weird, but that’s only because he loves calligraphy so much. He likes to show us beautiful examples of
calligraphy that he’s done, often written on scraps of old paper and store
receipts. Once, he stood up in the
middle of class and performed Thai Chi in order to illustrate to us how
calligraphy is like many other arts. He
also loves to give us random lectures.
Once,
he told us about the history of the Arabic alphabet, why it is written the way
it is, and how it helped non-Arabs understand Islam. The Arabic alphabet was developed before
Islam. There were no dots (which, in
case you can’t read Arabic yet, distinguish many different sounds from another)
and no short vowels. After the Quran was
revealed, people realized that the alphabet needed to be easier for outsiders
to understand. Arabs could read the Quran
easily because they had the necessary language background, but non-Arabs could
not. One linguist was finally convinced
to restructure the Arabic alphabet after it was pointed out to him that without
short vowels (which, at that time, were absent from the Arabic alphabet) a
non-Arab could misinterpret the sentence “God absolves himself of criminals,
and His prophet (also absolves himself of criminals)” as “God absolves himself
of criminals and His prophet”. An
easier-to-read alphabet was developed to ensure that the Quran could not be
misunderstood.
I
also learned from my calligraphy teacher about the origins of the short vowels
and why they are written the way they are. Basically, short vowels are modeled after long vowels, only a lot smaller.
My advice to new Arabic students is to really enjoy the Arabic alphabet. It is easy to read and really helps you understand the language and culture.