Eastern Eye (UK)

Planting seeds of inclusivit­y

NEW RHS AMBASSADOR MANOJ MALDE URGES ASIAN INVOLVEMEN­T IN EVENTS SUCH AS CHELSEA FLOWER SHOW

- By AMIT ROY

THE British Asian landscape designer Manoj Malde has spoken of “creating connection­s” as part of his new role as an ambassador for the Royal Horticultu­ral Society (RHS) with a remit for “inclusivit­y” that was announced at the Chelsea Flower Show on Monday (23).

That was the day the Queen, who is a patron of the RHS, toured the show in a specially adapted golf cart and admired floral tributes to her Platinum Jubilee.

Malde’s mission is to get ethnic minorities to visit such RHS shows as Chelsea, Hampton Court Palace and Tatton Park, which he said are currently “perceived” to be the exclusive preserve of the English upper and middle classes.

The RHS appeared to recognise it had a problem with reflecting wider society because it announced that “Manoj will help the RHS open its doors wider and be more accessible for all”.

Born in Mombasa in Kenya into the Gujarati Oshwal community, Malde came to London as a four-year-old in 1973. He has been given the responsibi­lity for ushering in change at the RHS, which was founded in 1804 and began holding a flower show in Chelsea in 1912.

The RHS now has over 600,000 members, with numbers growing over the pandemic when many discovered solace and mental peace in getting closer to nature and the soil.

Malde, who designed a garden for the 2017 Chelsea Flower Show, will be familiar to TV viewers who saw the six-part BBC2 series, Your Garden Made Perfect,

last year and, more recently, Secrets of the Royal Gardens on Channel 4. This year he is a judge – a considerab­le honour – at Chelsea in the “sanctuary category”.

The UK is said to have 30 million gardeners, including British Asians, but the latter are conspicuou­s by their absence from Chelsea and other RHS shows. Malde made the point that the doors of the RHS are already open, but the organisati­on needs to do more to make the ethnic minorities aware that all are welcome and British Asians “should not be afraid” to come to events like Chelsea.

He admitted that he was “still in a state of shock” after receiving a phone call inviting him to be an RHS ambassador.

“I want people from certainly my cultural background, my heritage, but also other cultural background­s to partake in gardening and shows like this,” he told Eastern Eye in the press tent at Chelsea.

He said: “I guess I have been doing my little bit behind the scenes with the RHS and working away quite actively, talking to them, giving them ideas. They realise there is an issue (about inclusivit­y); maybe it’s a perceived issue. But how can we set that right? And that’s what I’ve been trying to help them with – creating connection­s with other communitie­s.

“The RHS actually do an amazing amount of work in different communitie­s already. It’s just that they don’t shout about it so much. And I almost think they should, because the incredible work they do should be heard about.

“They also do a lot with schoolchil­dren as well, getting them connected with nature, teaching them about how things grow, and getting them interested, not just in garden design, but gardening.”

Malde, one of 10 new ambassador­s appointed by the RHS, thinks it would be useful to call a group meeting to evolve a unified strategy because “we want to make absolutely sure that this initiative really, really works”.

On British Asian engagement, he has some ideas: “There are amazing Asian businesses out there. Wouldn’t it be lovely to see some of those businesses sponsoring gardens at the show? I would love to see somebody like Tata Steel maybe featuring and sponsoring a garden here.”

At home in Brookman’s Park in Hertfordsh­ire, Malde cares for his 88-year-old mother. “I took her outside in the garden and said, ‘Come on, let’s plant some chillies.’ I think all that is very therapeuti­c. I grew peas as well. Actually, I managed to harvest two batches of peas, and cook them that day. It was the most delicious curry you could have ever tasted. To have fresh vegetables from your garden is lovely. You can grow things like dhaniya [coriander] and fenugreek. I would love to get my hands on curry leaves.”

This year’s show has something radically un-Chelsea – a garden rememberin­g police brutality and “the Mangrove Nine who confronted racism in 1970”.

Marshalls Gardens of Huntingdon has a corner at Chelsea, where the firm manages to mix flowers with such easily grown vegetables as lettuce, broccoli, carrot, cabbage, dwarf French beans, peas, Pak choi, leek, beetroot and kale.

It says with “prices going through the roof”, a patch, 10mx10m, can “keep a family of four through much of the season”, and that vegetables can be grown even in window boxes.

Incidental­ly, as a landscape designer, Malde urges his clients not to turn their front gardens into concrete car parks, a common Asian failing, because that encourages flooding since there is nowhere for the rainwater to escape.

This is a growing urban crisis that is demonstrat­ed in the London Fire Brigade (LFB) stall which received a visit from the minister for floods, Rebecca Pow. One home, ‘No 20,’ with a concreted front, displayed a flooded car, while ‘No 22’ next door, with a garden, had escaped. The display illustrate­s “how permeable paving and extra planting can reduce the risk of flooding in homes”.

Told there were Asian streets in Southall in London where not a single front garden had escaped being “hardscaped”, David O’Neill, assistant commission­er of the LFB, said: “This is happening in cities across the country.”

This year for the first time, there is an Indian food stall, Karma

Streeterly, at

Chelsea, with chef Nand Kishore Yadav, originally from Patna in Bihar, dispensing masala dosa and chicken kaathi rolls.

These is also a stall celebratin­g the forthcomin­g Commonweal­th Games to be held in Birmingham from July 28 to August 8, with Indian-style marigolds and a bat and wickets to signal the women’s cricket competitio­n.

Chelsea, coming back to its regular May slot for the first time since 2019, also sees the return of a regular – Christo Mckinnon-Wood, of Wilstone, a Shropshire firm, who has been to India “50 times”, sourcing iron and stone garden artefacts from Gujarat and Rajasthan.

He travels around India on his three Royal Enfield motorcycle­s which “my friends there looks after for me.” He hopes to spend October and November in India, urging locals not to pull down old buildings with intricate carvings.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? GROWIN ATTRACTION (Clockwise from hi image) A garden elebrating the forthcomin­g Commonweal­th ames
risto Mckinnon-Wood; he angrove Garden; Manoj Malde; t arma reeterly stall; and the Queen at he
elsea Flower how on Monda 23)
GROWIN ATTRACTION (Clockwise from hi image) A garden elebrating the forthcomin­g Commonweal­th ames risto Mckinnon-Wood; he angrove Garden; Manoj Malde; t arma reeterly stall; and the Queen at he elsea Flower how on Monda 23)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom