Mad about Mangoes in Malihabad
Photograph by Preeti Verma Lal
A non-descript muddy street leads straight
into the Abdullah Nursery. There are no mustachioed, baton-wielding
security guards; forget a gate, there is not even a barbed
fence. You drive straight into the nursery where red plastic
chairs and an old table await you. The sun is sharp and
I scurry under the prized tree for a little shade. I perch
myself on a gravel pathway, sip on the cola, soak all the
information and let hedge-sparrows flirt with the breeze.
Within minutes there are other Khans being kind and spewing
information - how angry parrots peck the fruits, how naughty
squirrels fatten every summer on mango juice and how the
bhoonga insect is any orchard's most frightening nemesis.
There
is something very supercilious about Malihabad. You might
call it conceit, but it really has no identity crisis; it
has no uncertainty about its reputation. It is the mango capital
of the country, within its 20 sq. km. radius grows about 700
varieties of mangoes that fetch roughly Rs 150 crores each
season. Here you don't need to be beatified as an orchardist,
everyone is born with a definite occupation - Thou shalt own
an orchard! Ask anyone what makes it so special and the inevitable
answer is: Mitti ka masla hai (it is all about the soil).
So puffed up is its confidence that its most famous mango
grower once got a letter from Jeddah that only had Kaleemullah
Khan, Malihabad, India, on the envelope. It is also all in
a family. In Malihabad the same blood seems to run in everyone's
veins; the blood of an Afridi Afghan called Fakir Mohammad
Khan Sahib Goya who married 11 times and had 52 children.
Not just the blood, all of Malihabad shares the same aroma
too, on its street waft the whiff of mangoes - lush, luscious
and blessed.
They say a pilgrim's path is always strewn
with perplexities. And so truly said. If you are a mango
aficionado on a pilgrimage to Malihabad, carry a little
forgiveness for the terribly rutted and mucky 35 kms from
Lucknow. If you don't roll the car windows up, you might
soon look like a sack of Fuller's Earth and if you don't
fasten the seat belt, a bone or two might just fall off.
Add to all this, the beyond 42 degree Celsius heat. Stack
water, patience and like me, if you are a stranger to Malihabad,
stop anywhere and just ask for Hazi Kaleemullah Khan or
Abdullah Nursery. That's where the mango narrative can begin
and end and there would be no missing links.
A non-descript muddy street leads straight
into the Abdullah Nursery. There are no mustachioed, baton-wielding
security guards; forget a gate, there is not even a barbed
fence. You drive straight into the nursery where red plastic
chairs and an old table await you. There's Afsak Ahmed too,
a friend who also runs errands for Kaleemullah Khan. Khan
is not there, but before you blink Ahmed scampers on his
rickety bicycle and returns with chilled cola. Meanwhile,
Nazmi, Khan's son, is already showing the family's prized
possession - the 90-year old tree on which grows 300 different
varieties of mango. The sun is sharp and I scurry under
the prized tree for a little shade. I perch myself on a
gravel pathway, sip on the cola, soak all the information
and let hedge-sparrows flirt with the breeze. Within minutes
there are other Khans being kind and spewing information
- how angry parrots peck the fruits, how naughty squirrels
fatten every summer on mango juice and how the bhoonga insect
is any orchard's most frightening nemesis.
There were stories about how Khan's home
was laden with trophies and citations. Shoaib Khan, Khan's
nephew, is worried about the heat and takes us to Khan's
home where the shelves are literally burdened with trophies
and shields. A few minutes later Kaleemullah Khan walks
in. The first thing you notice is his genial smile and good
looks; the next he mesmerizes you with his mango tales and
his metaphors about how mangoes are like human beings, each
mango has innate virtues. Khan inherited the 20 acres of
mango plantation from his father Abdullah Khan and years
ago started experimenting with crops and breeds. On one
tree he has nurtured 300 varieties of mangoes and that feat
garnered him a place in the Limca Book of Records. He also
refused an offer by the Iranian government to settle in
Iran and do what he loves - grow mangoes. Khan is not willing
to leave Malihabad, it is his love; it is his fiefdom.
Perhaps experimentation and an attractive
smile are genetic with the Khans. Kaleemullah's younger
brother Hamidullah who owns nearly 50 acres of mango orchards
has slogged seven years to develop a late variety of mango
that would yield fruits even in winter. Hamidullah has not
christened the tree yet, but he dreams of a day when people
would shiver by the fireplace and eat his special variety
of mango in December. Like the elder Khan, he too smiles
beatifically.
Ask any mango purist from the North to
choose one variety and he would invariably pick the Dussehri.
It has dark flesh and takes its name from Dussheri, a small
village about 25 kms from Lucknow. The village's claim to
fame is the original 300-year old Dussheri tree which some
would have us believe was not planted by humans; it rose
from the earth as a blessing.
For centuries the tree has been the property
of the Nawab of Lucknow and even now the fruits of this
tree are picked and sent to the Begum who also owns the
palatial Dussheri House. They are never sold in the market.
This summer the tree was laden with at least 1,000 kgs of
gorgeous fruits.
There's more to the mango narrative than
spraying insecticide and plucking the fruits. Much before
the fruits ripen, the orchards are auctioned. I sat through
an auction of 200 trees that began with a bid of Rs 50,000
and ended at Rs 1.33 lakh. Not for them the gavels on a
mahogany lectern, the bids are screamed by a man whose decibel
level can demolish a weak roof. He perhaps ends up with
a sore throat every night because every day he screams for
nearly 10 orchards and gets paid anywhere between Rs 200-500
per deal. Then there are the peti (box) makers, who buy
mango timber for nearly Rs 100 a quintal, out of which they
carve 10-15 petis, selling each for Rs 8-10. The carpenter
who hammers 50 nails in each peti gets paid only 50 paise
for the work! Sikander whose family has been in the business
for three generations informs that each season they make
about 15,000 boxes. Once the mangoes are packed, transporters
like Kamaal Khan 'Guddu' rev their trucks and take the famous
Malihabadi mangoes to various mandis, including Azadpur
in Delhi. Guddu alone ferries nearly 100 trucks to Delhi;
he is not the only one, there are 20 other transporters
from Malihabad. It is after so much fuss that the mango
finally lands on your dinner plate. Imagine that!
If you want to see Malihabad in its magnificence,
go there between June 10 and 20. That's when the mangoes
wear their fineries, scatter their scent and sway elegantly
in the breeze. You might call it conceit; I would call it
the closest approximation to ecstasy.
Published in Swagat
magazine, June 2005. |