In May 2025, Dawson College launched an investigation into violent and aggressive social media posts that were created by Islamists and their enablers on the social media platform Discord.
The Discord channel, called “MedServeur,” had over 1,400 members and was originally established to assist prospective Quebec medical school students with the admissions process. However, the channel became a hub for violent imagery, Islamic supremacist commentary, and hateful content targeting various groups.
Women were objectified and dehumanized, being labeled as either “Breedable” or not, and described in crude and sexually derogatory terms such as “Ran through by BBC [Big Black C*ck],” implying promiscuity through racially charged and violent language. Women in the medical field were broadly dismissed as “All whores.”
Antisemitism was also rampant, with Jews referred to as “Unnameables” and labeled as people who should be “Redacted.” Additionally, the channel contained numerous posts filled with racist, homophobic, and misogynistic rhetoric, reflecting a toxic environment of intolerance and extremism.
There are hundreds of pages of similarly hateful posts, including the following:

The radicalism was ongoing for months and received little to no pushback from other MedServeur users. Posts and replies included violent and threatening Islamist commentary, as well as misogyny, general contempt directed towards blacks, Indigenous Canadians, and sexual minorities, and open hostility towards Jews in particular.
Since the story broke, the MedServeur posts have received widespread condemnation. Concerns have been raised about admitting individuals with such views into the medical profession, where patient safety and dignity are paramount.
The posts were encouraged and amplified by the channel administrator, who indeed posted some of the most egregious content himself. The channel administrator of MedServeur had a distinctive profile picture that matched a (since-deleted) Facebook profile picture for the account of a Dawson College student, Ahmad Mousattat. He was identified on MedServeur by other Dawson students in his classes. One wrote, “You use the same pfp [profile picture] everywhere. It’s very obvious, loll.”

Who is Ahmad Mousattat?
Ahmad Mousattat is a student at Dawson College studying Enriched Health Sciences. He is originally from Syria and came to Quebec in 2019. Mousattat is one of Dawson’s most prominent Muslim student activists. According to his (since deleted) LinkedIn account, Mousatta is “A Muslim seeking to leave an impact,” and is “[C]urrently designing an organisation that seeks to train and raise the next generation of Muslim Leaders in Quebec.”

According to the same LinkedIn account, Mousattat was the Founder and Leader of the Islamic Relief Quebec Collegial Team (IR) from September 2023 onward. He claimed that his team raised more than $60,000 in their first year of operations and stated, “Our team functions in Dawson College, Vanier College, McGill University, Concordia University, and John Abbott College.”

@ldir: Every time you have an intrusive thought, say the opposite
Admin: Bro it’s either verbally abusive or the abuse is transmitted through the arms
Mousattat was also the President of the Muslims’ Students’ Association (MSA) from December 2023 to January 2025, when the MSA published Islamist posts on its social media accounts. MSA posts under Mousattat’s presidency included a “Letter from the Islamic Front.” Some of the posts from the MSA in November 2024 included the following: “History will bear witness to the triumph of Islam. Remember Hittin.” “Know that your vote cannot alter the destiny that awaits the Zionist entity.” “Efforts to obstruct justice will be in vain… The liberation of all the Islamic homelands is inevitable.” One post referred to Saladin-the Sultan who defeated the Crusaders in Jerusalem in the battle of Hattin in 1187. These posts were a call for Holy War against Israel.

Admin: Do you know the MSA and Islamic Relief?
Idirsiuuu: Yes, yes, I know them (MSA and Islamic Relief)
Admin: I was the Amir of the MSA for the past two years. But I was referring to my work in Islamic Relief, we worked everywhere, really, here I led the collegial team, which I founded two years ago, in collecting donations, and internationally I did more physical work with our orphans. But I am on hiatus for the moment, I burnt myself out.
In MedServeur the administrator talked about being a student at Dawson. He was identified as Ahmed (sic) by a fellow student in his classes named Hinzla. He confirmed during exchanges that they were in class together. He identified himself as the “Amir” of the MSA at the time when Mousattat was President. The admin also described founding and heading the Islamic Relief team in Quebec, as Mousattat did, as well as charity relief work for orphans, which Mousattat did through IR.

Admin writes: I have planes though.
Who? Yeah, but underneath your white shirt you always have the same belt (dynamite emoticons x 3)
Admin: Meme of an Arabic “Chad” with a bomb belt.
According to his deleted LinkedIn, Mousattat was already involved in patient care in a medical setting. In 2021, he volunteered at the St. Laurent Vaccination Center. He helped the nurses in patient care and assisted in patient registration. In 2022 and 2023, Mousattat volunteered at the l’Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal. According to his LinkedIn profile, “I helped the nurses and the medical personnel with some tasks to remove some pressure off of them. I regularly spent time in the emergency room and hemodialysis sectors in order to speak with patients and visitors and make sure their stay is as comfortable as possible.”
Mousattat was also selected to join the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM, formerly CAIR-Canada) at their leadership conference. He has been welcomed and praised by Muslim organisations across Canada.
Since Ahmad Mousattat deleted all of his social media accounts, he could not be reached for a comment concerning his seeming involvement as the MedServeur administrator.
Dawson College Response
Dawson College confirmed that it has launched an investigation into the involvement of students or employees in the MedServeur Discord channel. However, the college cited Quebec’s Law 25 as a limitation on disclosing specific details regarding the identities of those implicated.
Notably, following media coverage of the story, Dawson College’s website was scrubbed of all references to Ahmad Mousattat. Around the same time, Mousattat’s Facebook and LinkedIn accounts were also removed from the internet.
Previously, the Dawson website featured articles highlighting Mousattat’s achievements, including his receipt of the Aditya Youth Trust Fund Scholarship, his recognition from the Lieutenant-Governor of Quebec, and his status as a finalist for the Loran Scholarship. All of these articles have since been removed.
At the time of publication, Mousattat remained listed on the Loran Scholars Foundation website as a finalist for the award. According to the foundation, “The Loran Scholarship is valued at more than $100,000 over four years of undergraduate study.”

After B’nai Brith Canada highlighted the MedServeur posts on social media, many of the offensive posts were removed, and Discord agreed to take action. However, these are band-aid solutions. These students remain in our community, remain unidentified, some already have access to patients, and others will potentially become future physicians.
The underlying problem of Islamic radicalism being fostered and permitted to foment at the institutional level remains.
The issue of foreign radicals being welcomed to Canada and then networking through our educational institutions, dubious charities, and NGOs remains.
The fact that these individuals and their extremist views are then unleashed on the innocent and unaware public, including vulnerable medical patients, remains.
These tangible problems remain because they are not being addressed at the policy level by any level of government. Instead, we hear endless “Aw shucks, tsk tsk” condemnations and politically palatable bromides as the situation worsens.
Whenever an incident of radicalism occurs, politicians often respond by cautioning the public against Islamophobia, rather than addressing the root causes. As a result, students are reluctant to come forward and identify radical classmates, fearing retaliation and being labeled as Islamophobic.
Meanwhile, mainstream media outlets and advocacy organizations cover these incidents without critically examining the underlying factors that contribute to the problem. In contrast, independent journalists who investigate and expose radical elements are frequently targeted, harassed, or even arrested, hindering their ability to report the truth.

Admin: I dealt with two other three-letter agencies.
Ehouais: Too bad I have a passport
Medgooner: Yo, I think recently they deported a boy who had a passport
Admin: Malcolm X with an assault rifle, surveilling for threats
Medgooner: It was an “Admin error” (100% voluntary)
The latest incident is yet another example of the growing wave of unabated Jew hatred and rising Islamic supremacy that has swept across Canada following the jihad terrorist attacks on Israel on October 7th, 2023. Importantly, this hate was not limited to Israel itself; it extended to anyone visibly identified as Jewish, such as those “wearing a Kippah.” It also targeted women, visible minorities, sexual minorities, and anyone perceived as standing in the way of the Ummah—a term referring to the global Muslim community.
Remarkably, even single mothers and “problematic” Sunni countries were not spared from this hostility, despite the fact that Sunni Muslims constitute approximately 87% of the world’s Muslim population. This raises critical questions: Who remains acceptable in the eyes of these students? Who can be considered safe within Canada’s hospitals? Is it only the Islamic supremacists and the compliant infidels who enable them?

Duckawik: Quebec is finished, we will soon dominate.
Admin: Thank you, brother. The Islamic state of Quebec.
ehouais: Erase.
Medmedd: We are all in Quebec, but we all want to flee.
Quebec faces a profound moral crisis regarding the next generation of healthcare leaders. There is a strong likelihood that some of these radicals will discriminate against patients based on political or religious affiliation, immutable characteristics, or sexual orientation. Additionally, many may choose to ignore their own biases or remain silent out of fear or complacency.
Given that nearly every individual seeking medical care is inherently vulnerable, especially during treatment, the severity of this issue cannot be overstated. Failing to address it directly and comprehensively, as the UK has begun to do with its immigration challenges, signals that the Quebec government is no longer merely a passive observer. Instead, it risks becoming an active enabler of a new wave of extremist influence within the healthcare sector.