Nasha Mukt Navnirman is not just a book—it is a movement.
Addiction does not announce its arrival. It seeps quietly into homes, classrooms, and aspirations-often unnoticed until promise begins to fade.
Nasha Mukt Navnirman emerges from years of observation, reflection, and engagement with India’s youth and educational institutions. Moving beyond rhetoric and alarm, this book offers a thoughtful exploration of substance abuse as not merely a legal or medical concern, but a social and moral challenge that demands collective resolve.
Blending lived experiences, policy perspectives, and community insight, the narrative examines how silence, stigma, and neglect allow addiction to thrive-and how awareness, empathy, and institutional leadership can dismantle its hold.
At its heart, Navnirman-“new construction”-is a call to rebuild: to restore dignity where it has been eroded, to strengthen families and campuses, and to safeguard the immense demographic promise of India.
This is not simply a commentary on the crisis. It is an invitation to participate in renewal.