Uluru Statement co-chairs Professor Megan Davis and Pat Anderson are set to host open online sessions on the Voice to Parliament allowing Australians to ask them questions they have in the week leading up to the referendum.
Grassroots yes campaign the Uluru Dialogue will run daily Start a Yarn sessions from Monday through to Thursday via the Uluru Statement organisation website before the nation heads to the booths.
Professor Davis and Ms Anderson have made journey's around the country for intimate yarning circles and community discussions around the proposal in recent months.
The online sessions are planned to encourage the same kind of conversation.
Mob23 campaigner Lucy Davis, who will facilitate the meetings, said they're about providing a safe space for people wanting to know more.
"The sessions allow people to ask questions they may not feel comfortable asking in a different arena. There is no such thing as a stupid question; this is about people being given correct information and using that information to make an informed decision when it comes to the referendum," she said.
"The Start a Yarn concept is designed to encourage all Australians to participate. It uses the respectful methodology of a Yarning Circle; we open the floor – or circle - for people to ask questions.
"We usually get through all of the questions people want to ask. We encourage anyone and everyone to join in. This is about Australians gaining access to the correct information and then being able to make their own informed decision.
"These sessions are about learning the truth of the story of how we got to a referendum, and then people deciding what their decision will be on referendum day."
Ms Davis said it is "a massive ask" to expect all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders to agree on every issue, and asked for people not to push Indigenous Australians in to declaring their position on the Voice.
"This referendum is so very important and will affect First Nations Peoples the most. The build-up has so far triggered a whole heap of racism and trauma, so thankfully there's already enough of us in that area speaking up and declaring our position," she said.
"We encourage people in the Yarning Circle to not necessarily go to their local Elder and ask which way they need to vote – it's a lot more personal an issue for us than it is for everyone else."