Let’s walk a mile in a refugee’s shoes

UN-aided app simulates daily struggles of fictional teen

April 25, 2017 07:02 pm | Updated 07:02 pm IST - KUALA LUMPUR

A staff member displays the mobile application "Finding Home" on her phone during a launch at the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) office in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Tuesday, April 25, 2017. The U.N. refugee agency and a Malaysian firm have launched an interactive smartphone application aimed at raising public awareness and empathy about the worldwide struggle of refugees. (AP Photo/Daniel Chan)

A staff member displays the mobile application "Finding Home" on her phone during a launch at the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) office in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Tuesday, April 25, 2017. The U.N. refugee agency and a Malaysian firm have launched an interactive smartphone application aimed at raising public awareness and empathy about the worldwide struggle of refugees. (AP Photo/Daniel Chan)

The United Nations helped launch a smartphone app on Tuesday that allows users to “walk a mile in a refugee’s shoes” by simulating the daily struggles of a fictional Rohingya Muslim who was forced to flee her home.

The ‘Finding Home’ app, developed by the advertising firm Grey Malaysia, allows users to simulate the phone of ‘Kathijah,’ a fictional 16-year-old, who fled persecution in Myanmar and is trying to make a new life in Malaysia.

Users essentially take over Kathijah’s phone, answering her calls and texts and scrolling through her photos. In one scenario, she gets a message from her brother Ishak back in Myanmar.

“Kat, r u safe?” the message says. “It was a raid, they found us. Had to run.”

Richard Towles, the UNHCR representative in Malaysia, said he hoped the free app would help people empathise with refugees.

“The refugee story is often a deeply personal one and difficult for people to understand,” Mr. Towles said. “We hope that this application will allow a viewer to walk a mile in a refugee’s shoes in order to understand what they go through every day in order to find safety.”

High number

There are more than 1,50,000 asylum seekers and refugees in Malaysia, one of the highest numbers in Asia, according to the UNHCR. About a third of them are ethnic Rohingya Muslims, identified by the U.N. as one of the world’s most persecuted minorities, who are denied citizenship by Myanmar and chased off their land in repeated outbreaks of communal violence.

“The refugee crisis is everywhere, yet we are inevitably desensitised to it as it has been going on so long,” said Grey’s creative director, Graham Drew.

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