At 82, India’s ‘Mango Man,’ father of 300 varieties still perfecting his...

At 82, India’s ‘Mango Man,’ father of 300 varieties still perfecting his sweet science

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At 82, India’s ‘Mango Man,’ father of 300 varieties still perfecting his sweet science

Kaleem Ullah Khan, locally known as the “Mango Man,” peels a mango at his orchard in Malihabad, India on June 20, 2022.


Every day, Indian octogenarian Kaleem Ullah Khan wakes at dawn, prays, then ambles about a mile (1.61 kilometers) to his 120-year-old mango tree, which he has coaxed into producing more than 300 varieties of the beloved fruit over the years.

His footsteps quicken as he draws nearer and his eyes light up as he peers closely at the branches through his spectacles, caressing the leaves and sniffing the fruits to see if they are ripe.

“This is my prize of toiling hard in the scorching sun for decades,” the 82-year-old said in his orchard in the small town of Malihabad.

“For the naked eye, it’s just a tree. But if you see through your mind, it’s a tree, an orchard, and the biggest mango college in the world.”

The school dropout was just a teenager when he conducted his first experiment in grafting, or joining plant parts to create new mango varieties.

He nurtured a tree to produce seven new kinds of fruit, but it blew down in a storm. 

But since 1987, his pride and joy has been the 120-year-old specimen, source of more than 300 different types of mango, each with their own taste, texture, color and size, he says.

One of the earliest varieties he named “Aishwarya” after Bollywood star and 1994 Miss World beauty pageant winner Aishwarya Rai Bachchan. To this day, it remains one of his “best creations.”

“The mango is as beautiful as the actress. One mango weighs more than a kilogram, has a tinge of crimson to its outer skin and it tastes very sweet,” Khan said.

Others he named in honor of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and cricket hero Sachin Tendulkar. Another is “Anarkali,” or pomegranate blossom, and has two layers of different skin and two different pulps, each with a distinctive aroma. 

“People will come and go, but the mangoes will remain forever, and years after, whenever this Sachin mango will be eaten, people will remember the cricketing hero,” said the father of eight.

Standing 9 meters tall, his treasured tree has a stout trunk with wide-spreading, thick branches that yield a pleasant shade against the Indian summer sun. The leaves are a patchwork of different textures and smells. In some places, they are yellow and glossy, and in others, a dark, dull green. 

“No two fingerprints are the same, and no two mango varieties are similar. Nature has gifted mangoes with traits like humans,” Khan said.

His method for grafting is intricate, and involves diligently slicing a branch from one variety, leaving an open wound into which a branch from another variety is spliced and sealed with tape. 

“I will remove the tape once the joint becomes sturdy, and hopefully, this new branch will be ready by next season, and bear a new variety after two years,” he explained.

Khan’s skills have won him numerous accolades, among them one of India’s highest civilian honors in 2008, as well as invitations to Iran and United Arab Emirates.

“I can grow mangoes even in a desert,” he says.

India is the largest producer of mangoes, accounting for half the global output. Malihabad, in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, has more than 30,000 hectares of orchards and accounts for nearly 25 percent of the national crop.

Mostly owned by families for generations, the orchards are a mango lover’s paradise, with the best-known variety possibly the melt-in-the-mouth Dasheri, named for the nearby village where it originated in the 18th century. But farmers are worried by climate change, with a heat wave in 2022 destroying 90 percent of the local crop, according to the All-India Mango Growers Association. 

The number of varieties has also fallen, which Khan blames on intensive farming techniques and the widespread use of cheap fertilizers and insecticides.

Growers also plant too many trees packed too tightly together, leaving no space for moisture and dew to settle on the leaves, he says.

But he still has a good life, he says.