Tsuktilong Jamir
Student Leader, Dimapur
The continued enforcement of alcohol prohibition in Nagaland, once hailed as a moral milestone, has today become one of the most glaring examples of policy failure in the state. Nearly three decades after the Nagaland Liquor Total Prohibition Act (NLTP) was enacted, its results are plain for all to see: rampant smuggling, adulterated brews, and a thriving black market controlled by syndicates. Far from eliminating alcohol consumption, prohibition has only driven it underground, creating new social evils far more destructive than the ones it sought to cure.
It is time to confront the myth that prohibition has safeguarded our moral or spiritual well-being. The harsh reality is that it has only deepened inequality. The poor suffer the brunt of this failed system—paying exorbitant prices for dangerous, spurious liquor—while the wealthy easily access imported brands through unofficial channels. Prohibition has thus become a poor man’s scourge, not a safeguard of virtue.
The Nagaland Baptist Church Council (NBCC), as a moral and spiritual authority in the state, must now courageously rethink its position on this issue. The Church’s mission should place greater emphasis on faith and spiritual renewal rather than moral policing. True Christian ministry calls for compassion and rehabilitation, not stigmatization and enforcement. Instead of continuing to endorse prohibition in its current ineffective form, NBCC should consider investing in counselling, awareness, and rehabilitation centres—spaces where those struggling with addiction are offered hope and healing.
It is also worth reflecting that the very nations which introduced Christianity to our land, including the United Kingdom and the United States, have long abandoned the path of prohibition. History shows their attempts led only to organized crime and societal decay. When those nations realized the futility of their own prohibitions, they shifted focus toward responsible consumption and social accountability. Nagaland, too, must learn from this lesson.
Scripture itself does not condemn the moderate use of alcohol. Jesus famously turned water into wine at Cana (John 2:1–11), and Paul advised Timothy to take a little wine for his health (1 Timothy 5:23). The Bible warns against drunkenness, not the act of drinking. To equate every consumer of alcohol with sin is therefore neither biblical nor just.
The moral cost of this failed policy continues to grow. Syndicates thrive, bootleggers profit, and adulterated liquors claim lives—while society maintains the illusion of righteousness. Ending this hypocrisy requires courage, compassion, and a renewed understanding of Christian love and governance.
This is an appeal not against faith, but for a sincere and enlightened application of it. The call now is not for indulgence, but for integrity.