Kartar Dhillon
Kartar Dhillon was a South Asian American political activist and writer from California. Dhillon grew up in the Ghadar Party, working to end British colonialism in India. As an activist, she supported unions, the Black Panther Party, farm workers, political prisoners, and the Korean reunification movement.
Her father Bakhshish Singh Dhillon and her mother Rattan Kaur lived in Oregon and California. Kartar Dhillon was the fourth child in the family. At the time she was born, their family was the only Indian family in Simi Valley. From 1916 to 1922, she and her family lived in Astoria, Oregon, where her father worked at a lumber mill.
During World War II, Dhillon worked as a machinist and truck driver from the Marine Corps. She picked crops, worked as a waitress, and was the secretary for the San Francisco, Teamsters and Abestos Worker's unions. She retired in 1983.
Her writing included "The Parrot's Beak," an autobiographical essay about her early life published in Making Waves: An Anthology of Writings By and About Asian American Women. In 1994, at age 80, Dhillon founded the Chaat Collective, a South Asian American art and performance collective.
She died in 2008 in Berkeley, California.Writings
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Interviews
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Media
- The film Turbans, about a Sikh family in Astoria, Oregon in 1918, is based on Dhillon's memoirs