Sarrah Sammoon moves between Colombo and Washington with the ease of someone for whom borders have always been more conversation than constraint. For more than thirty years, she has built the architecture through which capital travels, enterprise crosses oceans, and women find their footing in rooms once closed to them.
Her work touches governments and grassroots alike—corporates, ministries, founders, and the quietly powerful—yet her register remains the same in every room. She gathers thinkers, investors, and authors at her table; she opens doors others did not know existed.
She holds that democracy is strengthened through enterprise and that women, given capital and counsel, will reshape the economies they were once asked merely to enter.
True influence, she believes, leaves the room before its name does.