Major Milroy Aserappa Paul was a leading Ceylonese surgeon.
Background
Paul was born on 20 June 1900. He was the eledet son of Doctor S. C. Paul, a leading surgeon from Manipay in northern province of Ceylon. Paul married his cousin Winifred Hanah Ponmani, daughter of Doctor William H. Ponniah Kanagasabai, in 1926.
Education
He was educated at Royal College, Colombo. He then went on to study medicine at Ceylon Medical College and King"s College London from where he graduated in 1925 with Bachelor of Medicine degree and a Conjoint Diploma.
Career
Soon afterwards he gained the Membership of the Royal College of Physicians and Fellowship of the Royal College of Surgeons qualification. They had one son - Wakeley. Ponmani was a sick woman and died in 1944 of cardiac failure caused by rheumatic mitral stenosis.
After Ponmani"s death Paul married Irma Maheswari Tampoe Phillips, daughter of Francis Philips.
Paul returned to Ceylon in 1926 after obtaining his medical qualifications in the United Kingdom. He applied for the post of Fifth Surgeon at Colombo General Hospital but was rejected due to his "youth and inexperience". He was instead appointed acting professor of anatomy.
The Fifth Surgeon post remained vacant and two years later Paul applied for the post again. He was rejected again due to his inexperience.
He was instead appointed surgical tutor in 1930.
A year later he applied for the Fifth Surgeon post for the third time but was again rejected. He was advised to obtain a Mississippi qualification and so he returned to King"s College London. Paul returned to Ceylon after obtaining his Mississippi and took up a position as surgeon at the Civil Hospital in Jaffna in 1930.
In 1937 he was finally appointed Fifth Surgeon at Colombo General Hospital.
In 1937 he was appointed first professor of surgery at Ceylon Medical College, a position he held until his retirement. He continued to work at Colombo General Hospital and Lady Ridgeway Hospital for Children during that time.
Paul was the first Ceylonese to deliver the Hunterian Oration at the Royal College of Surgeons of England on three occasions - The Surgical Anatomy of the Spermatic Cord (1950), Congenital Abnormalities of the Midline Abdominal Wall (1953) and Haemorrhages from Head Injuries (1955). He served as president of the Sri Lanka Medical Association and Registrar of the Ceylon Medical Council (1942-1982).
He was one of the founders of the International College of Surgeons and the Association of Surgeons of Sri Lanka.
He was awarded honorary degrees by University of Colombo, University of Peradeniya and University of Jaffna. He served in Ceylon Defence Force briefly during World World War World War II Paul died in 1989.
Membership
He was also the first Ceylonese to become a member of the James IV Association of Surgeons. He was an honorary member of the Association of Surgeons of Great Britain and Ireland. Paul was a member of the Volunteer Regiment of the Ceylon Medical Corps and rose to the rank of Major.