there's some kind of... >> when women in northern india who are in enslaved families, who have been enslaved for generations, when they get an anslavery worker come in and talk to them for just a little while, it's the women who lead the families out of slavery. and what they say to the women antislavery workers, is, "i don't want my daughters to be raped the way i've been raped." >> hinojosa: yeah, it's very crystal clear. >> yeah, it's crystal clear. because slavery for women, no matter what the job is, picking cotton, working in a brothel, factory, you name it, means sexual assault. >> hinojosa: at one point or another, it's going to... >> yeah, absolutely. >> hinojosa: so kevin, you now haveual tizenship. you're an american and a british citizen. and probably some people would be surprised when they find out that you actually grew up in the middle of oklahoma. >> that's right. >> hinojosa: and your first experience of what you saw as a child in oklahoma between a black family and your family... >> oh, well, when i was a tiny boy, and... >> hinojosa: but it planted the seed. >> it did. i