Ranj dhaliwal biography sample

          Ranj Dhaliwal (born ), Canadian author; Sarindar Dhaliwal (born ), Canadian artist; Sohraab Dhaliwal (born ), Indian cricketer; Sukh Dhaliwal (born.

          Born in Vancouver on July 14, , Dhaliwal says he is disturbed by the number of Indo-Canadian gangland murders in Canada and believes stories such as Daaku..

          Ranj Dhaliwal

          Canadian author

          Ranj Dhaliwal (Punjabi: ਰਣਜ ਧਾਲੀਵਾਲ; born 1976/1977) is a Canadian author.

          Early life

          Born in Vancouver, Dhaliwal grew up in Surrey Central, British Columbia in the 1980s, which was a time when Indo-Canadian families were scattered across the suburbs. Unfortunately this was a time when minorities were subjected to discrimination and racism, which Dhaliwal faced firsthand.

          Dhaliwal grew up in the Whalley district of Surrey, about an hour east of Vancouver.

        1. Dhaliwal grew up in the Whalley district of Surrey, about an hour east of Vancouver.
        2. Ranj Dhaliwal is a Sikh.
        3. Born in Vancouver on July 14, , Dhaliwal says he is disturbed by the number of Indo-Canadian gangland murders in Canada and believes stories such as Daaku.
        4. Ranjit "Ranj" Singh Cheema ( May ) was a Vancouver-based Sikh-Canadian gangster, drug trader and longtime under-world rival of notorious gangster and.
        5. The Nijjar story exposes criminal networks exploiting the Sikh diaspora, which Surrey author Ranj Dhaliwal described in relentless fictional.
        6. During his youth, Dhaliwal grew up with kids that at the early age of 13 were packing guns, stealing cars, getting into fights, making alliances, and selling drugs at school with police always close by watching the beginning of the Indo-Canadian gang culture rise.[1][2]

          Personal life

          Ranj Dhaliwal is a Sikh.

          He and his wife live in Surrey, British Columbia and have three sons.[3][4][5]

          Writing career

          In 2006, Dhaliwal's first novel Daaku was published.

          The release of Dhaliwal's novel was the subject of controversy