The African Language School
Structured, cultural, and built for the diaspora. The only platform with this depth of African language learning.
Choose your language
NigeriaYoruba
35M+ speakers
Reconnect with Nigeria's most widely spoken language. Structured grammar, native-speaker audio, cultural context.
Start Yoruba
NigeriaIgbo
25M+ speakers
Deep cultural roots, practical everyday Igbo, and lessons from native speakers.
Start Igbo
West AfricaHausa
60M+ speakers
The language of northern Nigeria and much of West Africa. Business-ready and culturally rich.
Start Hausa
West AfricaPidgin
75M+ speakers
Nigerian Pidgin, the lingua franca of West Africa. Informal, expressive, essential.
Start Pidgin
East AfricaSwahili
200M+ speakers
East Africa's most spoken language. Essential for travel, business, and Pan-African identity.
Start Swahili
21 African nationsFrench
300M+ speakers
Vital for 21 African countries. Our African-context French curriculum covers the continent, not just Paris.
Start FrenchWhy our language courses are different
Native-speaker audio
Every lesson features audio recorded by native speakers, not AI voices, so you hear the real rhythms and tones of each language.
Cultural context built in
Language without culture is just vocabulary. Each course weaves in history, food, music, and everyday life so the language sticks.
Progressive assessments
Structured checkpoints track your progress from Beginner through Intermediate to Advanced, with certificates at each milestone.
For the African Diaspora
Whether you were born abroad or moved overseas, language is one of the most powerful ways to stay connected to home. Our curriculum is designed specifically for diaspora learners, balancing structured lessons with real cultural depth.
Maintain your mother tongue, teach it to your children, or learn it for the first time. Every course meets you where you are and takes you where you want to go.
"I grew up in London and could barely greet my grandparents in Yoruba. After three months on LEAP, I spoke to them in Yoruba on the phone for the first time. My grandmother cried. So did I."
- Adaeze O., London, UK