Rifat Halim, whose preferred title is “Sunak’s Path to No. 10 may have begun in Ceylon” Acres of newsprint have been devoted to Rishi Sunak’s rise. He is said to be the first Asian to occupy No. 10 Downing Street. This is not correct. Asia begins with the Tigris river. Boris Johnson’s great grandfather was a Turkish politician. He should have been called Boris Kemal, as Johnson is the maiden name of his great grandmother. 
Three people from Ceylon were path breakers for the vast Indian subcontinent. The first Asian to be called to the bar was a Sinhalese Christian Harry Dias. The word “Cinghalese” was used to describe all the people from the island.
Sir Muthu was one of the few from the East who socialized with the British establishment. In the 1860s, he once ran into a British official in a London bar. He had known the British official when he was a domineering administrator in Ceylon. The administrator had been condescending toward Sir Muthu. He had been treated as a lowly native. In London, the tables were turned. The administrator was just minor colonial civil servant. Sir Muthu was moving in exalted circles. As it happened, Sir Muthu was about to attend a party hosted by Lord Palmerston that evening. Sir Muthu asked the official “will I meet you at Pam’s tonight?” to drive home the change in status.
Sir Muthu cleared the way for another Asian pioneer, who was also from Ceylon. James Peiris was a Sinhalese Christian who was an undergraduate at Cambridge in 1880s.
Sir James was the first non-European President of the Oxford or Cambridge Union. No other coloured was elected as President of the Oxford or Cambridge Union for nearly another fifty years. Sir James was a Liberal in Britain and later became one of Ceylon’s leaders. He was the Vice President of the Ceylon Legislative Council and was the Acting Governor of Ceylon. He was one of the very few natives who acted as Governor in the British Empire. There was other Asians path-breakers in the 19th century. In the 1890s, two Parsi gentlemen from Bombay Sir Dadabhai Naoroji and Sir Mancherjee Bhownaggree were elected to the House of Commons. Sunak’s elevation is the culmination of a long series of events. The British have been broad-minded towards Asian from the 1800s. This is in contrast to many other societies. Sunak’s rise is not surprising. In fact, it was overdue given the advances made by Asians, particularly Ceylonese, that were made in 1800s.
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