In 2019, Mostafa Heikal did something that defied the standard immigrant playbook. He was living in London, Ontario, a city booming with newcomers, established networks, and familiar amenities. But while other entrepreneurs were fighting for market share in the dense urban core, Mostafa got in his car and drove north.
He drove past the city limits, past the subdivisions, and into the quiet communities of Arva, Thorndale, and Komoka.
To the casual observer, these villages looked like peaceful bedroom communities. But Mostafa didn't just see a quiet country road; he saw a waiting room.
He saw thousands of families moving into the County who were desperate for services that hadn't arrived yet. He saw parents who wanted to return to the workforce but were stalled by a lack of infrastructure. He saw a gap that policy papers call a "childcare desert," and he saw it not as a problem to endure, but as a business case to solve.
Mostafa Heikal is the second face of the I Am Middlesex campaign, not just because he moved to the County, but because he bet his future on it.
When Mostafa arrived in Canada from Alexandria, Egypt, in 2016, he initially followed the city's gravitational pull. But he quickly ran into the "congestion and saturation" of the urban market.
"Middlesex stood out as a vibrant, welcoming place with leaders and families who embraced new ideas," Mostafa recalls. While others saw the rural townships as "too far," he saw them as "untapped."
His logic was a form of geographic arbitrage. In the city, a new business is just another option. In the County, a new business is a lifeline.
This vision was tested immediately. In 2019, Mostafa and his wife struggled to find childcare for their own son, facing waitlists that stretched for months. The research confirms their experience: before 2019, many rural communities in Middlesex effectively had no licensed center-based childcare infrastructure.
Instead of waiting for a spot to open up, Mostafa decided to build the facility himself.
Pouring the Foundation
Opening Angels Childcare in Arva in December 2019 was a strategic risk. But the response was immediate. The spaces filled instantly. Today, the waitlists at his centers stretch for two years or more, underscoring the sheer scale of the need he identified.
He didn't stop at Arva. He expanded to Komoka and Thorndale, effectively becoming the primary licensed childcare provider for entire communities.
This expansion did more than just give toddlers a place to play; it unlocked the local workforce. Every spot Mostafa created represented a nurse, a teacher, or a tradesperson who could go back to work. In a rural economy, childcare is not just a service; it is economic infrastructure.
The impact of this infrastructure is best articulated by employees, not by parents. Two staff members who nominated Mostafa for this campaign emphasize that he created meaningful careers in their own backyard.
By employing over 50 staff members, Mostafa became a significant regional employer. He proved that you don't need to commute to London to find professional, stable work. You can build a career in the same village where you live.
Start, But Don’t Start Alone
Mostafa's success challenges the idea of the "self-made" entrepreneur. He is the first to admit that his strategy would have failed without the unique culture of Middlesex County.
"My advice is simple: start, but don't start alone," Mostafa says.
He credits his integration to the immediate, tangible support of local organizations. When he proposed his ideas, he didn't hit a wall of bureaucracy; he found partners. Groups like Community Futures Middlesex and the County’s Economic Development department didn't look at his accent or his background; they looked at his business plan and saw a shared future.
"Middlesex is a place that welcomes you, your ideas, and your vision," he says. "If you are willing to invest your energy, you will find opportunities".
The Empty Waiting Room
Mostafa Heikal represents the ideal outcome of Canada's new push toward rural immigration. He is the rural strategist; the newcomer who chooses the small town not because he has to, but because he sees the math more clearly than anyone else.
Seven years ago, he drove down a country road and saw a waiting room full of families in need of support. Today, that waiting room is empty. The children are in classrooms in Arva and Thorndale, learning and growing. Their parents are back at work, driving the local economy.
"Middlesex is a place that welcomes you, your ideas, and your vision. If you are willing to invest your energy, you will find opportunities."
- Mostafa Heikal