Monday, December 23, 2024

Australia’s Maya is the new online chatbot for women of colour who face racism

“Maya can provide in-time support and resources for First Nations women and those from diverse backgrounds.”

PRAVASISAMWAD.COM

A new online chatbot has been launched to provide assistance to women experiencing racism in Australia. The idea was born by the founder of the Creative Cooperative who faced racism in the wake of COVID-19. Maya can provide in-time support and resources for First Nations women and those from diverse backgrounds, reported sbs.com.au.

Priyanka Ashraf was grocery shopping in mid-2020 when she was confronted with abusive remarks she wasn’t prepared for. She recalled the “extremely confronting” moment another shopper disgustedly told her to go back to where she came from — and to take the COVID-19 virus with her, too.

“She said something along the lines of, ‘There are all of these people everywhere, and I just wish they take their COVID virus back to the country that they came from’,” Ashraf, 36, said.

Ashraf went home battling the varying emotions of “confusion, despair, anger, shame” that overwhelmed her in the 60 seconds after she was racially abused. Reflecting on her own experience of racism, as well as what her other friends — who are women of colour — also experience, Ashraf embarked on a mission to find support for people who face what she did.

“We just take people for a very friendly way of being able to share their story and be able to report an incident in a way that is quite different from what we’ve seen elsewhere where it can feel quite bureaucratic.”

— Wendy Qi Zhang, Service Designer and Researcher

The new online chatbot, Maya Cares, was launched recently to assist First Nations women and those from culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) backgrounds who experience racism in Australia. Maya can assist women who access the chatbot, which sends automated messages of support that could provide immediate in-time support to feel validated about their experiences.

Ashraf is the founder of The Creative Co-Operative who spearheaded the chatbot project, and her team spent more than a year speaking with 200 women from varying backgrounds to make it as realistic as possible.

Wendy Qi Zhang, the service designer and researcher behind the project, said she spoke with women who all had lived experiences of racism, what they did to confront it, and whether there were resources available to assist them. In their research, the Creative Cooperative found that around 80 per cent of 150 women were unsure if they experienced racism or not, due to self-doubt, shame and fear of backlash.

“We just take people for a very friendly way of being able to share their story and be able to report an incident in a way that is quite different from what we’ve seen elsewhere where it can feel quite bureaucratic,” she said.

While the chatbot can only be accessed in English, Zhang said the team had plans to expand it to other languages for migrant women, whose first language wasn’t English, to access as well.

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Roma Ghosh
Roma Ghosh
Roma Ghosh has recently retired as Associate Professor for Media Studies from an international university. She was with the Times of India as a correspondent for many years. Her passion is cooking and she has been doing recipes and photo shoots for Women's Era for the last 15-odd years.

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