The inaugural session of “Nun Chai Talks” was held on Wednesday at the Waqar Knowledge Centre, Mini Secretariat Bandipora, introducing a community initiative built on a simple but distinctive idea, that meaningful change begins with conversation, not instruction.
Drawing on the familiar Kashmiri ritual of nun chai and unhurried exchange, the session brought together students, youth and citizens to discuss the issues closest to them, drug abuse, career progression and educational and employment opportunities.
Deputy Commissioner Bandipora, Indu Kanwal Chib, joined the discussion, encouraging young people toward constructive engagement and informed life choices. What sets the initiative apart is not its activities but the relationship it establishes.
Conventional awareness programmes flow one way, an authority speaks, an audience receives. “Nun Chai Talks” treats the citizen as a co-author of the conversation rather than its target. With no dais, no script and no line between speaker and listener, it makes dialogue itself the purpose, not a tool to deliver a fixed message.
That equality of footing showed its power when a recovered drug user shared his journey through addiction and recovery. Spoken among peers rather than from a podium, his testimony served as a reminder that awareness, support and collective responsibility can help individuals rebuild their lives.
The initiative reflects the vision behind the Waqar Knowledge Centre, inaugurated last month by the Lieutenant Governor under the Nasha Mukt Bharat Abhiyan, conceived as a shared community space rather than a government facility. The District Administration plans to extend the concept to all blocks of the district, anchored in public participation and community ownership.