This story is from November 14, 2016

Mota Singh, UK's first Indian-origin Sikh and ethnic minority judge, dies

An Indian-origin Sikh, who became UK's first-ever ethnic minority judge and first to sit on the English Bench wearing a turban instead of a horse-hair wig, has died. In 2010, Mota Singh received a knighthood from the Queen, the highest civilian honour for his services to administration of justice.
Mota Singh, UK's first Indian-origin Sikh and ethnic minority judge, dies
In 2010, Mota Singh received a knighthood from the Queen, the highest civilian honour for his services to the administration of justice. (Image: YouTube)
LONDON: An Indian-origin Sikh, who became UK's first-ever ethnic minority judge and the first to sit on the English Bench wearing a turban instead of a horse-hair wig, has died.
He was 86.
Mota Singh was found unconscious last Friday and was taken to hospital but did not recover, the metro.co.uk reported.
Paying tribute to him, his wife, Swaran Kaur, said, "He was a wonderful person who achieved so much in his life.
He was so hard working."
He was the first person from a minority ethnic group and first Judge to sit on the English Bench wearing a turban instead of a horse-hair wig.
Singh, a Ramgarhia Sikh, born in 1930 in Nairobi, Kenya, Mota Singh was only sixteen when his father, Sardar Dalip Singh, passed away.
He was forced to leave school in order to look after his family, which included his widowed mother, who was only 32 at the time, and his five younger siblings.
Singh's school teachers, knowing that he was gifted, convinced his family that he should complete his matriculation.

While looking after his family during the day, the judge pursued his Bar studies at night and in 1953, came to England to complete the second part of his studies.
He joined the English bar in 1967 and was appointed to the bench in 1982.
In 2010, Mota Singh received a knighthood from the Queen, the highest civilian honour for his services to the administration of justice and community relations.
Tributes have been pouring in on Twitter, with entrepreneur Rami Ranger calling him a "great ambassador for the Sikh and Indian community".
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