another domestic worker facing a similar plight is called waridah.her earnings help feed her three children back at home in indonesia. she hasn't seen them in two years. she is expected to be available for work, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. >> no time off. because my agency says no off days. >> there's a tiny room for domestic servants next to the laundry room. but waridah doesn't even have those two square meters to call her own -- a subletter is living there. instead, she sleeps in a corner of one of the bedrooms. her employer says there's nothing wrong with that. >> that's for the best. we can keep an eye on her. >> this is the world where women like waridah come from. in this jakarta slum, children who grow up here learn to endure just about everything. young women who want to help their families or escape the grinding poverty often end up in places like this ((03:23)), singing lullabies in english. it's a training course for prospective domestic workers. there are thousands of courses like this one across indonesia and the philippines. dewi ra