About this course
This is one of the highest levels of Qur’an education at NUTQ Academy,
designed for students who wish to perfect their recitation and earn an authentic Ijazah with a continuous chain (Sanad) connecting them to the Prophet ﷺ.
Under the supervision of a qualified Sheikh, students will recite the entire Qur’an with precise Tajweed, receiving corrections, feedback, and guidance until mastery is achieved.
Upon successful completion, the student will be awarded an official Ijazah certificate recognizing their recitation through an unbroken chain of transmission.
📚 Course Content:
Unit 1 – Initial Evaluation:
Assessment of recitation level and Tajweed skills.
Review of key Tajweed principles.
Unit 2 – Guided Recitation:
Live supervised Qur’an recitation.
Correction of articulation, fluency, and rhythm.
Unit 3 – Tajweed Perfection:
Mastering rules of Noon Saakin, Madd, and articulation points.
Voice and tone training for balanced recitation.
Unit 4 – Completion & Revision:
Completing the full Qur’an recitation.
Final review session with the Sheikh.
Unit 5 – Certification (Ijazah):
After successful completion, the student receives an Ijazah certificate with an authentic connected chain (Sanad) to the Prophet ﷺ.
🎓 Course Objectives:
Perfect Qur’an recitation with Tajweed.
Learn directly from a certified Ijazah holder.
Obtain an authentic Sanad linked to the Prophet ﷺ.
Prepare to teach Qur’an and Tajweed to others.
👥 Target Audience:
Advanced reciters and Huffaz seeking Ijazah.
Tajweed students ready for certification.
Those who completed full Qur’an recitation.
🧾 Assessment & Certification:
Performance & Accuracy (30%)
Tajweed & Articulation (40%)
Memorization & Consistency (20%)
Attendance & Commitment (10%)
Upon completion, receive an official Ijazah certificate from a certified Sheikh with a connected chain to the Prophet ﷺ.
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The Qur’an begins as life itself begins — “In the name of Allah.”
A phrase that opens the gates of mercy and invites the presence of the Divine into your heart before your lips begin to recite.
Then comes Surah Al-Fātiḥah, the essence of all guidance — the soul’s first dialogue with its Creator.
It teaches you how to speak to Allah: to begin with praise, to acknowledge His mercy and justice, and to ask sincerely for His guidance.
It’s the first heartbeat of the believer’s journey, the reminder that the Qur’an is not just a book to be read, but a path to be walked.
Then unfolds Surah Al-Baqarah, vast like a field of light.
It speaks of faith and hypocrisy, of Adam’s story — his fall, his repentance, his forgiveness — and the eternal truth that no sin closes the door of mercy.
It recounts the tale of the Children of Israel, showing how hearts can harden even after miracles, and how faith must be tended like a living flame.
This Juz is a school of faith:
It teaches patience, purity, gratitude, and trust.
It shapes the believer into one who prays, gives, remembers, and reflects.
And by its end, the soul stands at the threshold — purified, awake, and ready to receive the rest of the Qur’an.
It is the beginning of the journey, the first whisper of light —
a reminder that true guidance is not found by the eyes, but by the heart that seeks.
The Call of Obedience and the Formation of a Nation
This Juz opens with a turning point — the change of the Qiblah, the direction of prayer.
It is not merely a shift in orientation, but a test of hearts.
Through it, Allah distinguishes between those who obey without hesitation and those whose faith depends on understanding.
True faith, it teaches, is to submit even when reason wavers — to trust the wisdom of the One who sees beyond all horizons.
This section forms the spiritual foundation of a new nation.
It speaks to the believers, molding them into a community of discipline, gratitude, and unity.
The commands of fasting, charity, pilgrimage, and the laws of life and death begin to unfold here —
not as restrictions, but as pathways to purity and growth.
Every verse carries the rhythm of transformation:
the believer learns that obedience brings clarity,
that trials build trust,
and that life itself is an arena of worship.
Within these verses, the story of Abraham (Ibrāhīm) shines like a beacon —
his unwavering surrender to God’s will, his prayers for a righteous nation, his building of the Sacred House.
It is as if the entire Juz whispers:
“Be like Abraham — steady in surrender, firm in faith, gentle in heart.”
By its end, this Juz leaves the soul grounded —
rooted in trust, softened by obedience,
and ready to live as part of a people chosen not for privilege, but for purpose.
The Covenant of Faith and the Test of Sincerity
This Juz continues the grand conversation between Allah and His servants —
the believers who strive, the prophets who led, and the hypocrites who wavered.
It tells of divine trust and human weakness, of unity in belief and division through pride.
In these verses, the legacy of the prophets unfolds —
Moses, Jesus, and the line of those who carried light through generations.
Each prophet bore the same message: surrender to the One God, live with truth, and stand firm in compassion.
Then comes a call that reaches into every heart:
“O you who believe, enter into peace — completely.”
Faith, here, is not a fragment of life — it is life itself.
Toward the end, the verses begin to flow into Surah Āl ʿImrān,
a surah of beauty and balance — faith after loss, strength after sorrow.
It calls believers to patience, to steadfastness, and to humility before the will of Allah.
And as it closes, it leaves a gentle imprint on the soul:
True victory is not in triumph, but in trust.
The Family of Faith and the Battle for Truth
The story of Āl ʿImrān — the family of Imrān — continues,
a lineage of devotion and purity: Mary, her son Jesus, and the believers who stood firm beside them.
Their lives become lessons of grace and surrender.
Here, the Qur’an speaks of Uhud, the battle that tested hearts more than swords.
It reminds believers that even in defeat, faith can rise higher than victory.
Patience is power, and forgiveness is courage.
Every verse in this Juz teaches that truth must be lived, not just declared.
It exposes hypocrisy, corrects arrogance, and comforts the sincere.
Faith, it says, is not a garment for good days — it’s the shield for the storm.
By the end, the Juz whispers to the soul:
“Hold fast to Allah’s rope — even when the winds of the world try to tear it from your hand.”
Justice, Compassion, and the Honor of Humanity
This Juz opens the door to one of the Qur’an’s greatest themes: justice —
not just in law, but in mercy, family, and social balance.
It lays out the rights of women, orphans, and the weak —
a divine declaration that honor belongs to righteousness, not rank.
It commands fairness even with the enemy, honesty even when silence seems easier.
Amidst its rulings and guidance, this Juz breathes compassion.
It teaches that Allah forgives, but He also calls to responsibility —
for faith without justice is incomplete,
and worship without mercy is hollow.
The believer, by the end of this Juz, learns that life itself is a trust:
every relationship, every promise, every heart we touch —
all are watched by the One who is Al-ʿAdl, The Just.
And it concludes with a reminder that resonates through all time:
those who walk in the light of sincerity, though small in number,
carry within them the peace that nations seek.
Mercy, Morality, and the Weight of Trust
This Juz continues to weave the moral fabric of the believer’s life.
It speaks of truth in speech, humility in judgment, and mercy in power.
It reminds the Ummah that leadership is not privilege but responsibility —
a sacred trust before Allah.
The verses unfold like a mirror of society:
they warn against betrayal, hypocrisy, and injustice,
and they elevate forgiveness and fairness to the highest ranks of virtue.
It also turns to the People of the Book —
calling them to sincerity, reminding them that faith is not a title but a light that must be carried.
By its end, the heart feels the weight of amanah — the divine trust —
and learns that righteousness is not in words, but in deeds that heal.
The Oneness of God and the Language of Signs
This Juz opens with a hymn of creation —
the heavens, the earth, the alternation of night and day —
each a verse in the eternal book of signs.
It calls the heart to reflect, not merely to see.
Every leaf, every shadow, every heartbeat whispers tawḥīd — the oneness of the Creator.
Here, Allah addresses the doubters, the deniers, the heedless.
He unveils their excuses and shows that disbelief is not from lack of proof,
but from blindness of the soul.
The believer who listens to these verses feels the world alive with remembrance —
a universe where everything speaks “Subḥān Allāh.”
By the end, faith no longer feels abstract — it feels alive, surrounding you in every breath.
The Struggle Between Truth and Desire
This Juz continues to expose the human heart —
its longing for freedom, its fear of truth, its love for the fleeting.
The stories of past nations are retold not as history,
but as reflections of the same weakness in every age.
“We sent messengers, yet they were denied.”
The pattern repeats — arrogance blinds, comfort hardens, heedlessness destroys.
Then comes Surah Al-Aʿrāf, painting scenes of the unseen:
the story of Satan’s pride, Adam’s slip, and the eternal duel between obedience and ego.
This Juz whispers that the greatest battlefield is not outside, but within —
and that paradise and hell both begin in the heart long before they are seen.
The Path of Prophets and the Fall of the Arrogant
This Juz unfolds like a journey through the rise and fall of nations.
The stories of Noah, Hud, Ṣāliḥ, Shuʿayb, and Moses flow one after another —
each a lesson, each a mirror.
Through them, Allah reveals that guidance is constant,
but hearts choose either humility or pride.
The prophets called their people with gentleness and truth,
yet arrogance blinded them until the storms came.
Then comes Surah Al-Anfāl, a chapter of battle and victory —
but not the victory of swords, rather the triumph of faith over fear.
It calls believers to discipline, unity, and trust in Allah’s plan.
The heart leaves this Juz humbled —
learning that every fall of arrogance is the rise of sincerity.
Repentance, Purity, and the Call to Stand Firm
This Juz is a call to courage.
It was revealed in times of trial, when truth was costly and hypocrisy was loud.
Surah At-Tawbah speaks without the opening “Bismillah” —
for it is not a chapter of peace, but of purification.
It distinguishes between the sincere and the pretenders,
between those who give for Allah and those who hide behind excuses.
Yet even in its sternness, there is mercy.
It calls to repentance again and again —
a doorway always open, even for the weakest heart.
By its end, the believer feels renewed —
cleansed of fear, purified by struggle,
ready to stand among those who say:
“Allah is enough for us, and what a perfect Guardian He is.”
The Sea of Faith and the Tide of Surrender
This Juz opens like dawn after a long night — soft, patient, certain.
It speaks of Jonah (Yūnus), who fled in fear but found salvation in remembrance.
It teaches that running from Allah leads only back to Him.
Through the stories of Noah, Moses, and others, Allah reminds that every prophet’s path is marked by rejection —
but those who hold faith are never truly alone.
This Juz is a river of trust:
when the sea seems endless and the storm relentless,
remember the whisper from the whale’s belly —
“There is no god but You; Glory be to You; I was among the wrongdoers.”
Every believer who recites these verses feels that the ocean within them calms.
Faith, after all, is not escape from the storm — it is the strength to breathe within it.
Steadfastness in the Face of the Storm
This Juz is the story of endurance.
It carries the weight of Noah’s tears, Hūd’s courage, Ṣāliḥ’s patience, Abraham’s faith, and Lot’s loss.
Each prophet stood against nations blinded by pride,
and yet they spoke with the gentleness of truth.
When hearts tremble, the verse resounds:
“So remain steadfast as you have been commanded.”
It is not only a command — it’s a promise:
that patience is the rope that pulls the soul through darkness.
As the Juz closes, the light of Surah Ibrāhīm spreads like dawn.
Abraham’s prayer fills the heart:
that this land and its people remain faithful, thankful, and pure.
Faith here is not mere belief — it is heritage, planted like a tree that gives shade for generations.
Creation, Chaos, and the Breath of Mercy
This Juz opens with the eternal warning —
that denial brings ruin not from wrath alone, but from the silence of neglect.
It recounts the fall of Satan, the shaping of Adam,
and the reality that envy burns the envious before it ever reaches the envied.
Then Surah An-Naḥl comes — the Surah of Blessings.
Every verse lists the favors of Allah: the sun, the stars, the rain, the honeybee.
It whispers that gratitude is the root of worship.
It reminds the believer that every breath, every heartbeat, every drop of rain is a verse in the Qur’an of creation.
By its end, the heart learns to praise not out of duty, but out of love.
The Night Journey and the Quest for Meaning
This Juz begins with light — the Night Journey of the Prophet ﷺ,
a miracle of faith beyond reason, a sign that nearness to Allah is the greatest honor.
It then unfolds into reminders of morality and humility:
“Lower your wing of mercy to your parents,”
“Speak good words to people,”
“Walk humbly upon the earth.”
Then comes Surah Al-Kahf — a story for every soul seeking refuge from confusion.
The companions of the cave, the two gardens, Moses and Khidr, Dhul-Qarnayn —
each story is a mirror of patience, knowledge, and destiny.
This Juz teaches that faith is not to escape the world, but to walk through it with clarity.
It’s the Juz of wanderers — those searching for truth until they find it not in the stars, but in their hearts.
The Trials of the Heart and the Call of Love
The tales continue — deeper, gentler.
Moses’ journey with Khidr reaches its quiet wisdom:
that patience precedes understanding,
and that Allah’s plan often unfolds in silence.
Then Surah Maryam descends like a soft melody —
the story of purity, birth, and trust in the impossible.
Mary stands alone, trembling beneath the palm tree,
and Allah’s mercy flows: “Do not grieve; your Lord has provided beneath you a stream.”
Each verse is a touch of tenderness —
reminding the soul that no cry goes unheard,
no tear falls unnoticed.
Then Surah Ṭāhā rises, luminous with love —
the story of Moses and his calling on the sacred valley of Ṭuwā.
It is a call to every believer:
“Throw down what is in your hand — I will transform it.”
By the end, this Juz feels like standing barefoot on holy ground —
where fear turns to faith, and pain becomes purpose.
The Call of the Prophets and the Weight of Worship
This Juz opens with the nearness of the Hour — a whisper of urgency:
“Mankind’s reckoning has drawn near, yet they turn away in heedlessness.”
It is both warning and mercy, calling the distracted heart back to awareness.
Then unfolds a tapestry of prophets — Abraham, Noah, David, Solomon, Job, Jonah —
each carrying the flame of patience through the winds of trial.
Their stories are not tales of despair, but of resilience;
their lives teach that miracles come to those who keep faith when reason falters.
As Surah Al-Ḥajj begins, the tone shifts to awe and submission.
It paints vivid scenes of resurrection, pilgrimage, and the trembling of creation before its Lord.
This Juz ends with a call that echoes like thunder:
“Strive for Allah as He deserves to be striven for.”
And within that striving, the soul discovers peace.
The Signs of True Believers and the Voice of the Heart
“Successful indeed are the believers…” —
with this verse, the Juz begins like a sunrise.
It describes the qualities of those who have found serenity:
humility in prayer, honesty in speech, chastity, and loyalty to their trusts.
It then journeys through the stories of Noah, Moses, and other messengers,
showing how faith stands tall even when mocked by the world.
Surah An-Nūr illuminates hearts with purity —
it speaks of modesty, integrity, and the sanctity of community.
Then Surah Al-Furqān rises as a standard of truth —
separating light from darkness, sincerity from illusion.
By its end, you feel the weight of identity:
to be a believer is to walk as light in a world of shadows,
to be gentle yet unbreakable.
The Voices of the Prophets and the Power of the Word
This Juz is poetry in its highest form.
It flows through the voices of the prophets — Abraham, Moses, Noah, Lot, Shuʿayb —
each proclaiming truth to defiant hearts.
Every story beats with the rhythm of courage:
a lone voice against an empire, a whisper that becomes thunder.
Then comes Surah An-Naml — where the speech of birds, the ants, and the wind
becomes testimony that all creation remembers its Lord.
It’s a chapter of wonder — showing that wisdom and humility meet in the same heart.
This Juz teaches that words, when pure, are stronger than armies.
That revelation, when spoken with sincerity, reshapes the world.
Faith Under Trial and the Web of Weakness
The Juz continues the journey through An-Naml and into Al-Qaṣaṣ,
where the story of Moses unfolds — from the cradle in the river to the palace of Pharaoh.
It is the story of divine design: how weakness becomes strength,
how exile becomes destiny.
Then Surah Al-ʿAnkabūt (The Spider) descends with a parable that pierces the heart:
those who rely on anything other than Allah build their lives upon a fragile web.
It shatters with the first wind.
This Juz is for the believer who has suffered,
who has lost, who stands alone —
reminding that the house of faith is not built on comfort, but on conviction.
The Path of Reflection and the Light of Revelation
This Juz moves with calm and depth.
It speaks to the intellect — calling the heart to reflect on creation,
the rise and fall of nations, the reality of death, and the certainty of return.
Surah Ar-Rūm unfolds like a sunrise after despair:
the Romans were defeated — yet Allah promised their victory.
Through it, He teaches that hope is a form of faith,
and that His will moves unseen beneath history’s surface.
Then Surah Luqmān enters with the wisdom of a father to his son —
a melody of love and discipline:
“O my son, establish prayer, enjoin good, and be patient over what befalls you.”
And Surah As-Sajdah closes the Juz with submission —
the believer’s forehead lowered in gratitude,
the soul finally at rest beneath the rhythm of prostration.
The Call to Character and the Light of Devotion
This Juz opens with a command that shapes the believer’s soul:
“O Prophet, fear Allah and follow not the disbelievers.”
It is not only a message to the Messenger ﷺ —
it is an echo to every heart that carries his light.
Surah Al-Aḥzāb weaves the story of unity and trust amid the storm of battle.
It calls believers to courage, modesty, and loyalty,
and honors the Prophet’s household with purity and reverence.
Then Surah Saba’, Fāṭir, and Yā Sīn unfold like chapters of illumination.
They remind that the world, though vast and intricate, is guided by one command — “Be.”
And it is.
Yā Sīn — the heart of the Qur’an — beats with the rhythm of eternity:
it reminds that the Qur’an gives life to the dead,
that faith is the seed of immortality,
and that the heart which remembers Allah never truly perishes.
The Signs of Mercy and the Promise of Return
This Juz flows with tenderness and awe.
It speaks of life, death, and the gentle power of divine mercy.
Through Surah As-Sāffāt, Ṣād, and Az-Zumar,
it portrays the destiny of souls —
the rise of the righteous and the fall of the proud.
Here, the Qur’an teaches that sincerity is salvation:
that deeds are nothing without purity,
and that hearts are weighed not by their size, but by their truth.
The Juz ends with the image of the soul returning home —
its burdens lifted, its record shining —
and a voice welcoming it beyond the veil:
“Peace be upon you; you have done well, so enter it to dwell forever.”
The Soul Awakened and the Majesty of Revelation
This Juz is a symphony of surrender.
Surah Ghāfir, Fuṣṣilat, and the closing of Az-Zumar
are filled with majesty — verses that tremble with light.
It is here that the Qur’an unveils its grandeur as speech,
not of man, but of the One who created speech itself.
It shows the believer the path of daʿwah — calling to truth with gentleness and wisdom.
And it warns against arrogance — the veil that blinds even the most learned hearts.
As the verses speak of resurrection and accountability,
they do not frighten — they awaken.
They remind that every sound, every glance, every word
will one day rise to testify for or against us.
This Juz ends not in fear, but in reverence —
a quiet bow before the perfection of divine justice.
The Harmony of Revelation and the Beauty of Submission
This Juz begins with the music of letters —
“Ḥā Mīm.”
They open the chapters like divine keys, unlocking the unseen harmony of the Qur’an.
It speaks of revelation as mercy,
not as burden,
and of unity among those who truly believe.
The messages of Ash-Shūrā, Az-Zukhruf, Ad-Dukhān, and Al-Jāthiyah
flow like a river of remembrance:
honoring the prophets, humbling the oppressors,
and soothing the hearts of the patient.
It whispers that arrogance is noise,
but truth is silence —
steady, timeless, victorious.
This Juz leaves the heart softened —
ready to surrender, not out of fear, but out of love.
The Winds of Truth and the Legacy of the Messengers
The chapters here — Al-Aḥqāf, Muḥammad, Al-Fatḥ, Al-Ḥujurāt, Qāf, and Adh-Dhāriyāt —
read like a mirror to the Ummah.
They remind believers of their identity, their mission, and their manners.
Surah Al-Fatḥ celebrates victory not through conquest, but through forgiveness —
a peace treaty written in patience and faith.
And Surah Al-Ḥujurāt refines the heart:
it teaches respect, humility, and the sacredness of brotherhood.
The Juz ends with Adh-Dhāriyāt,
where the winds scatter seeds and souls alike —
reminding that everything moves by His command,
and that purpose is written in every gust, every grain, every breath.
“And I did not create jinn and mankind except to worship Me.”
With that verse, the believer remembers:
life is brief, but its meaning — eternal.
The Whisper of Destiny and the Weight of Light
This Juz moves like the wind itself — unseen yet unstoppable.
It carries the heart through Aṭ-Ṭūr, An-Najm, Al-Qamar, Ar-Raḥmān, Al-Wāqiʿah, and Al-Ḥadīd.
Each surah reveals a different face of majesty —
the trembling mountain, the falling star, the shining mercy, the balance of faith.
Surah Ar-Raḥmān sings,
“Which of your Lord’s favors will you deny?” —
again and again, until denial melts into gratitude.
And Al-Wāqiʿah divides humanity into three groups —
the foremost in faith, the people of the right, and the people of the left —
a mirror of eternal choice.
By the time Al-Ḥadīd closes the Juz,
the heart is reminded that every act of charity, every tear shed for Allah,
weighs more than mountains in the unseen scale.
Faith is not measured by words, but by light.
The Discipline of the Soul and the Purity of Obedience
This Juz is for those who seek refinement.
It shapes the believer’s manners, heart, and home.
Al-Mujādilah begins with the story of a woman whose plea was heard directly by Allah —
a reminder that no voice is too small for divine mercy.
Then Al-Ḥashr descends like a call to unity and reflection:
it ends with verses so majestic they shake the heavens —
“He is Allah — there is no god but He.”
These surahs teach the ethics of community, truth in speech, modesty in faith,
and strength in repentance.
By At-Taḥrīm, the Prophet ﷺ is reminded — and through him, us all —
that love for Allah must rise above every other love,
and that homes built on faith become gardens of peace.
The Majesty of the King and the Reality of the End
This Juz is like standing at the edge of eternity.
It begins with Al-Mulk — the declaration of divine sovereignty —
and moves through the cosmic rhythm of Al-Qalam, Al-Ḥāqqah, Al-Maʿārij, Nūḥ, Al-Jinn, Al-Muzzammil, Al-Muddaththir, Al-Qiyāmah, and Al-Mursalāt.
Each surah is a heartbeat —
calling humanity to wake, to see, to prepare.
The verses strike like lightning and soothe like rain.
They speak of the Day when secrets are laid bare,
of the call to rise and warn,
of the Prophet’s burden and his endless patience.
This Juz turns the heart toward the horizon of the Hereafter —
and whispers: “This life is passing shadow — but beyond it lies forever.”
The Echoes of the End and the Dawn of Reckoning
These surahs — short, sharp, rhythmic —
flow like waves of awakening.
From An-Naba’ to Al-Mursalāt,
the Qur’an’s tone becomes thunder and light,
reminding the heedless of the Day when mountains crumble
and hearts are unveiled.
Yet between the warnings, mercy shines —
in Ash-Shams, Ad-Ḍuḥā, and Ash-Sharḥ,
Allah comforts the Prophet ﷺ:
“Your Lord has not forsaken you, nor does He hate you.”
This Juz teaches that endings are beginnings in disguise —
that every hardship carries within it a seed of divine nearness.
It awakens the heart to awe, humility, and hope.
The Eternal Message and the Return to the Source
The final Juz is the Qur’an’s whisper of home.
Short surahs, bright as stars —
each one a spark of remembrance, a pulse of eternity.
It begins with the thunder of the Resurrection,
and ends with the serenity of protection.
Al-Ikhlāṣ declares the essence of faith:
“Say, He is Allah, One.”
Al-Falaq and An-Nās close the Book as a prayer —
a shield against darkness within and without.
This Juz is not an ending — it is the heart’s beginning.
It teaches that the journey through the Qur’an is not to finish reading,
but to begin living it.
By its end, the soul feels light —
freed, forgiven, fulfilled.
The same voice that began with “In the name of Allah”
now ends with “From the evil of whispering.”
The circle closes,
and the heart, at last, is home.
🌿 The Qur’an begins in light and ends in love.
From creation to eternity, it is not a book to be read once —
it is a breath to be lived forever.