TheMali are an occupationalcaste found among the Hindus who traditionally worked as gardeners and florists. They also call themselvesPhul Mali due to their occupation of growing flowers. The Mali are found throughoutNorth India,East India as well as theTerai region ofNepal andMaharashtra.Iravati Karve, an anthropologist, showed how the Maratha caste was generated from Kunbis who simply started calling themselves "Maratha". She states that Maratha, Kunbi and Mali are the three main farming communities of Maharashtra – the difference being that the Marathas and Kunbis were "dry farmers" whereas the Mali farmed throughout the year.[1]
InRajasthan, caste based outfits of Mali caste, like 'Mahatama Phule Brigade', which caters to various needs of community associates them withKushwaha caste. It is consented thatMaurya, Kushwaha, Shakya, Saini are the different terms used to describe same community in various parts of North India.[2][3]
Malis of Rajasthan launched a protest by blockingJaipur-Agra Highway in 2023; they demanded that a survey should be conducted by state in order to find out socio-economic status of the community in various regions of Rajasthan. They also demanded 12 percent reservation in government jobs and educational institutions in state for themselves and their sister communities, theShakya,Kushwaha,Maurya andSaini. In this protest, they were joined by members of aforementioned communities.[4]
In the Northernmost plain-land ofPunjab most of theMali’s (or Gardner) belong to disaffiliated communities ofSaini origin, while most of them were indefinably look below the member ofKshatriya (Rajput) orJat community.
The Mali community ofRajasthan andHaryana state adopted the surname Saini during the 1930s when India was under British colonial rule.[5][6]

The Mali ofMaharashtra are a caste of cultivators specializing in horticulture.[7] The caste is concentrated in five districts of Western Maharashtra and a district in theVidarbha region.[8] They traditionally made their living by cultivating fruit, flowers and vegetables.[9][10] There are many different sub-castes depending on what the sub-group cultivated, for example, the Phul mali were florists, the Jire mali grew jire orcumin, and halde mali cultivated Halad (turmeric) etc.[11][12] In the 20th century, the mali have been the pioneers in using irrigation to grow cash crops such as sugar cane and in establishing farmer owned sugar mills.[13] This led later in the century of wide spread cultivation of sugarcane in Western Maharashtra by other communities as well as the establishment hundreds ofsugar mills in Maharashtra and other regions of India.[14][15]
The 19th century social reformer,Jyotirao Phule belonged to the Mali community. His work extended to many fields including eradication of untouchability and the caste system, and women's emancipation. He and his wife,Savitribai Phule, were pioneers of education for women andDalits in India. The couple was among the first native Indians to open a school for girls of India. He also founded a home for pregnant Hindu brahmin widows who were cast out by their families.[16] In 1873, Phule, along with his followers, formed theSatyashodhak Samaj (Society of Seekers of Truth) to attain equal rights for people from lower castes. Other Mali such as Gyanoba Sasane and Narayan lokhande were leading members and financial supporters of the Samaj in its early years.[17] Lokhande has been called the father of trade Unionism in India.[18]
TheCentral Bureau of Statistics of Nepal classifies the Mali as a subgroup within the broader social group ofMadheshi Other Caste.[19] At the time of the2011 Nepal census, 14,995 people (0.1% of the population of Nepal) were Mali. The frequency of Malis by province was as follows:
The frequency of Malis was higher than national average (0.1%) in the following districts:[20]
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Citations
These figures as they stand are obviously wrong. The Marathas had not doubled their numbers between 1901 and 1911 nor were the Kunbis reduced by almost three-fourths. Either the recorders had made wrong entries or what is more probable, "Kunbi" as a caste-category was no longer acceptable to cultivators who must have given up their old appellation, Kunbi, and taken up the caste name, Maratha. ... The agricultural community of the Maratha country is made up of Kunbis, Marathas and Malis. The first two are dry farmers depending solely on the monsoon rains for their crop, while the Malis work on irrigated lands working their fields all the year round on well-water or canals and growing fruit, vegetables, sugarcane and some varieties of cereals
...the Malis (ie gardners who call themselves Saini now)..
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