Summer Qur’anic Arabic in 2025!

Old book open to a page with Arabic writing

Where: University of Toronto Mississauga Campus

When: June 23-July 31, 2025

Eligibility: This program is for adult learners, graduate students, and researchers in the field. Participants are expected to be at the intermediate level of Arabic. 

Administration Fees: $250 + tax (CAD) 

Due Dates: April 30, 2025*

Participants are to arrange their own transportation, lodging, food, and other costs associated with other personal items.  

*International participants wishing to stay at the UTM Residence shall apply before February 1, 2025. 

UTM Residence is a convenient option as it is directly on campus.  UTMLA will be happy to connect the UTM Residence with you for boarding on campus.  

Please contact utmla@utoronto.ca for more information and the program syllabus. 


Join us for our intensive in-person Summer Qur'anic Arabic offered by expert scholar Prof. Walid Saleh from the University of Toronto. For 6 weeks in the summer 2025, participants will take part in daily reading of selected texts. In addition to in-class lectures and study group work, the cohort is invited to enjoy engaging social events. Upon successful completion, participants will receive a certificate of participation from UTMLA. Stay tuned for more information!

 

REGISTRATION

 

For further information, please contact us at utmla@utoronto.ca.

Small group of students having an animated discussion in a cozy room

Meet Your Instructor

Headshot of Walid Saleh

Professor Walid A. Saleh studied Arabic language and literature at the American University of Beirut (BA 1989). He earned his PhD in Islamic studies from Yale University in 2001. He was a recipient of the DAAD scholarship in 1996–97 and studied with the late Albrecht Noth in Hamburg during this period. Professor Saleh is a specialist on the Qur’an, the history of its interpretation (Tafsir), the Arabic manuscript tradition, Islamic apocalyptic literature, and the Muslim’s reception of the Bible.  His second monograph, In Defense of the Bible (Brill, 2008), is a detailed study and an edition of al-Biqa`i’s (d. 1480) Bible treatise, “The Just Verdict on the Permissibility of Quoting from Old Scriptures,” which is the most extensive discussion of the place of the Bible in the Islamic religious tradition.

Professor Saleh teaches courses on Islam, the Qur’an, and Tafsir tradition; he is also a specialist on Arabic paleography and teaches advanced courses on the manuscript tradition of Arabic written literatures. He has published numerous articles on the Qur’an, Tafsir, apocalyptic literature, and Mirabilia literature in Islam.