Since Aly Hindy took over the leadership of the Centre in 1997, Salaheddin has transformed from a small mosque to become a full centre with many facilities and programs. Beside offering regular prayers, lectures and conferences, Salaheddin Centre is assisting the disadvantaged and the destitute by offering a host of services including full-time elementary and high school, marriage and counselling services, a food bank, youth programs, and funeral service along with other activities that seek to improve people's lives.
One of its key founders was Hassan Farhat,[3] but he was made persona non grata by the mosque's administrators and forbidden to continue to hold any position at the facility, although he was allowed to return for worship. A number of its worshippers have been accused of ties to terrorism, including Ahmed Khadr who ran a charity named Health and Education Project International that used to attend the mosque and allegedly funnelled money to Afghan training camps.[4][5]
Brothers Saeed and Masoud Rasoul, whose father was a prayer leader at the mosque, later went missing in Iraq, believed to have fought for Ansar al-Islam, possibly at the urging of Farhat.[3]
During the bail Hearing of Abdullah Khadr in August 2008, the Crown attacked the credibility of the mosque — although judge Trotter dismissed the suggestion, referring to testimony from RCMP officer Tarek Mokdad who agreed it was not reasonable to suggest the mosque supported terrorism.[7]