@Laith-
Not really what you’re saying is kind of not true. Arabic language is surrounded by many myths. If you take for example the case that says it is impossible for foreigners to learn it because it has many exotic and foreign sounds, where actually if you compare it to English, you conclude that it only has two or three sounds which are not found in English, and even though they can be learnt by imitation so nothing’s impossible to achieve. Also, its grammar is not complicated for those who claims so.
In English, we don’t always form the past participle using the –ed ending and we also have the irregular verbs, Arabic has nothing of the sort. The verb conjugation table is bigger than English (with singular, dual, plural, masculine and feminine categories) but once you learn the table for one verb you’re done, you’ve got it all covered. And do not forget the derivatives. Arabic language is rich in many and many words derived from one word. In addition, in Arabic you can choose whatsoever order of words you want, where in English the structure of the sentences is SVO, so no difficulties in Arabic, the meaning remains the same unless the sentence is that ambiguous it couldn’t be written in any other structure. And I can tell you an example in the Turkish language from a personal experience that I found a lot of difficulties learning it, cause I took courses, its grammar is difficult and the sentence structure is SOV, unlike English SVO, and as a multilingual person who knows like three languages and considering Turkish is a very foreign language and only spoken in Turkey, I would understand if it’s hard to learn, although you can learn anything in life you simply need hard work, perseverance, discipline and commitment. So no, I disagree with you on claiming that Arabic is hard to learn.