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It takes so much courage for survivors
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to speak out and tell their stories.
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For one, they are afraid of the traffickers
finding them,
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but two, it brings up
a lot of really really hard memories.
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And so I feel privileged to be able to hear
a survivor story
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and know that just by telling their story,
they trust me enough to hold it for them.
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(Music)
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My name is Lorena.
I'm from Philippines.
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My name is Othaya Kante Saldado.
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I'm from Sri Lanka.
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My name is Thige.
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I'm from Eritrea, Asmara.
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My name is Flora
and I'm from Pablo, Mexico.
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My name is Jason Gusman
and I am from the Philipinnes.
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So my name is Pichai.
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My name is Suchai.
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(Music)
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I was promised a good job for the house
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and didn't have to worry about anything.
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She said, "you can come with me
and work with me in restaurant.
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I have restaurant.
I pay you a lot of money."
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I thought it was a great opportunity
to come over here and work in the US.
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Because everyone in the Philippines,
like when they heard America,
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they wanna go- they wanna come here.
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(Music)
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I wasn't able to talk to anybody.
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I was forbidden
to put one step out of the shop.
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We sleep on the floor. Yes.
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I feel numb because I don't know what do,
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I don't know how to do it.
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I had to work 17 hours a day,
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seve- seven days a week.
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I wasn't able to talk to my co-workers.
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Sometime I feel like I wanna kill myself
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because it was to painful like it's really
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it's really like hurt- it's- it's really
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like, you know, hurtful how you see-
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how you see, um, treat me.
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(Music)
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I don't know.
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(Music)
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Where am I gonna go. I don't have anyone.
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I don't have any money even though
she promise me to pay me
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like 150 dollars a month
but I did not get that money.
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My trafficker often said
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that dogs have more rights,
in the United States, than I did.
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She said: "if I kill a dog,
I would get in trouble
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but if I kill you,
nobody is going to know
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and nobody is going to care."
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She took my passport. I can't go.
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I feel afraid.
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Because I don't know where to go.
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No passport how can I go back to Thailand.
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Yeah. I- I don't know-
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I don't know how to go.
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I don't know friend. No friend.
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Just friendly with in- in her house.
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The trafficker said, if I tell anybody
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what was going on,
nobody will believe me.
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And if I go to the police,
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they will not believe me.
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They will put me in jail
and she knew where my children were
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and I didn't want to risk my children.
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What she always said
that you can't go nowhere.
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You belong to me.
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[MUSIC]
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The day that I was escape, umm,
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the woman who helped me,
like took me to CAST
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the same day and uh,
since then CAST help me a lot
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with, you know, shelter, with food,
with money,
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whit anything that I need
to get on my feet.
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They brought you like who was gonna help
you to talk or interpreter.
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Like if you need something.
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For the blanket, for the clothes,
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they give me a lot.
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(Laughter)
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Encouraging me to do something like
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encouraging me like to go to school.
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And the CAST help you to know your right.
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And they- they make me very strong
and independent person.
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CAST open door for me.
CAST take me at Alexandra House.
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CAST take me school,
now I speak English a little bit.
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CAST has helped me through everything.
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(Music)
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When I spoke like with the congressman
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or with senator
like when we went to Washington DC.
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I feel like am very important person.
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We went to Sacramento
and we got the regulations pass.
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So now, thanks to the green card campaign,
we are, uh, green card holders.
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I want to be the voice of, um, the fixer
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because I know
how it feels to be in that situation.
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In this country, you know,
people has a voice,
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no matter who you are,
even though you are a slave.
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We all know we've been enslaved
and now we survived.
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Even though we passed like,
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but we always talk about
that and we're still sharing.
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(Music)
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Free it's, uh, it means a lot to me.
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Like when you're free,
when you became a free,
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it feels like you're a new born child.
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Freedom for me is really special thing
for me
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because I never have freedom in my life.
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When I was free, I was scared
but I was so happy.
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I'm happy now because I have everything.
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I go to school. I have job.
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I have green card. I have everything.
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I'm happy.
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Yes, I love freedom. Anybody love freedom.
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I am proud of myself.
I was a slave and now I'm survivor,
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I'm activist and I'm a mother.
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Freedom is everything to me.
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This is, you know, everyone deserve
to have a freedom. It's free.
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I wanna be part of it.
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I wanna be part of the mission
to end slavery.
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I wanna be part of the making
of the history of end slavery for good.
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And the CAST help me
become an independent,
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become like a real man.
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At CAST we have the previlege of working
directly with victims,
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who then transform and become survivors
after going through our critical programs.
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And that's important because we are able
to use those experiences
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and help survivors become leaders
and powerful agents of change
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to impact systemic social change.
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Who better to inform us
how to end modern day slavery
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than survivors themselves.
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When survivors tell us they're now happy,
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we know we've done our job at CAST.