Sister of Mercy Therese Masterson is one of the Australians hosting kitchen-table conversations of no more than 10 people in the hope that informed citizens will vote Yes in the Voice referendum, The Guardian reports.
Kitchen-table conversations, the Together, Yes organisers suggest, should be a gathering of up to 10 people in comfortable and non-threatening environments, which allow participants to engage in an open and honest dialogue about the voice proposal.
Each group will host two conversations, and each host is supplied with a special activities kit that provides information about the voice and the referendum process, as well as broader information on Australia’s Indigenous history.
Sr Therese Masterson lives in Cairns, where a Together, Yes forum was held in April. She held her first kitchen-table conversation a few weeks ago.
She says she has been concerned about the lack of support for the Voice in far north Queensland.
Sr Masterson rallied together a few people from her church for the kitchen-table event.
“We have to do our little bit,” she says. “Whether anyone takes any notice is another thing.”
This article is an extract from an article in The Guardian by Dellaram Vreeland.