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  • "Not only was the mango a gift from the Chairman, it was the Chairman." - Adam Yuet Chau, China's curious cult of the mango

  • One morning in August 1968,

  • factory worker, Wang Xiaoping, overheard news of a mysterious mandatory meeting.

  • Rumors whispered through the cafeteria described shipments of a gift from the country's communist leader, Chairman Mao Zedong.

  • And sure enough, managers soon dispersed a gift to every factory worker

  • a glass box encasing a golden wax replica of a mango.

  • Wang Xiaoping's factory wasn't the only facility to receive this unusual offering.

  • The Chairman gifted fresh mangoes to factories across China,

  • leading employees to stay up late, touching the fruits and contemplating the meaning behind Mao's gesture.

  • Some tried to preserve the fresh mangoes in formaldehyde,

  • while others ate the fruit and commissioned wax replicas of their prize.

  • In one factory, workers initiated a strange ritual:

  • peeling and boiling their mangoes to create a "holy" broth that was spooned into their mouths.

  • Since traditional Chinese medicine often involved boiling ingredients,

  • it's possible this mango wine was concocted as a kind of healing tonic.

  • Soon, fables formed that the fruit ensured a long life like the Peaches of Immortality from Chinese mythology.

  • And by refusing to eat the mangoes himself, Mao had generously sacrificed his own longevity for the working class.

  • But whatever Mao's intentions, this mango mania wasn't as frivolous as it might seem.

  • And in fact, it's harmless appearance hid a much darker truth.

  • Two years earlier, Mao Zedong had launched the Cultural Revolution,

  • a decade-long political and ideological movement intended to erase capitalist thought and cultural traditions from Chinese society.

  • To enact this plan, Mao called on the Red Guards, a student-led paramilitary group.

  • He enlisted them to help eradicate the "Four Olds"—

  • a vaguely defined set of customs, habits, and ideas often associated with the elite upper-class.

  • Mao's dogma was militant, and the Red Guard interpreted his vision as achievable only through violence.

  • The Red Guard acted above law and order, ransacking temples and tombs,

  • including those of dynastic royalty and Confucius.

  • Homes were raided and piles of books burned in the streets.

  • But the Red Guard's rampage went far beyond property damage.

  • They began holding "struggle sessions"—

  • public spectacles designed to shame so-called class enemies.

  • Victims were accused of holding elitist, capitalist values,

  • and were often forced to wear heavy signs detailing their crimes.

  • The Red Guard pressured people to accuse their friends and family.

  • They manipulated students to denounce their teachers and parents.

  • They gradually morphed into torture and executions.

  • After two years of the Red Guards' chaos,

  • Mao recanted his support and sent 30,000 factory workers to fight the Red Guard at Qinghua University.

  • With the help of the People's Liberation Army,

  • these factory workers succeeded, and Mao thanked them for their service with a crate of 40 mangoes.

  • This gesture wasn't quite as generous as it appeared since Mao was actually passing along a gift he received from Pakistan's foreign minister.

  • But much worse, this reward was quickly tainted by the ideology of the Cultural Revolution.

  • As a propaganda tool, Mao's mangoes demanded high levels of respect.

  • Workers boarded unheated buses in sub-zero temperatures to visit mandatory mango exhibitions organized by the government.

  • Factory workers were scolded for not holding their replicas securely.

  • And in Sichuan, a man who remarked that the mango was "nothing special" and "looked like a sweet potato"

  • was arrested, tried, and executed.

  • For reasons mostly unknown, the mango fever broke a year and a half later.

  • After the Red Guard was dissolved and participants were sent to the countryside for re-education,

  • the mystifying mango faded from official propaganda.

  • Wax from the replicas were repurposed for candles during power outages.

  • And today, you'd be lucky to find an antique mango tray or medallion while perusing a Beijing flea market.

  • But the tale of Mao's mangoes is just a minor story amidst a decade of painful, buried history.

  • Discussion of the Cultural Revolution is restricted across China.

  • And though some former Red Guards have attempted to challenge this policy by publicly reflecting and apologizing for their actions,

  • they still avoid maligning Mao Zedong.

  • Given the current political landscape of China,

  • only time will tell when this history will be discussed openly and freely.

"Not only was the mango a gift from the Chairman, it was the Chairman." - Adam Yuet Chau, China's curious cult of the mango

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