 The cocoa powder is made and that is the core ingredient of chocolate. All chocolates are made with this cocoa powder, chocolate powder, what we call. Thousands of children work there and I have been fighting against the traffic in slavery and exploitation of children for many, many years in that country. So I used to go there, but this time was important because I was sitting with the group of some children in that village and I asked them, I see in your hands and legs they are all wounded. You have injuries. I know that you are working in cocoa fields because they have thorns in it. It's not easy. I asked that, tell how do you like chocolates? A 14 or 15 year old boy smiled and looked at other boys and asked, what is that chocolate? He said chocolate is like bar, sweet, sometimes it's candy. Most of the children in the world love chocolate. We in India have different kind of sweets, but in European countries and many of the African countries, Latin America and the Americas, the chocolate is the sweet, the main sweet. The boy would not understand what chocolate is because he has never tasted chocolate. He had no idea about it. I was in Pakistan sitting with a group of children, a bunch of children who were stitching for boys some years ago in Seattle. And I saw that the boy, I see the similar situations in cases in Punjab and Uttar Pradesh and India as well. But in Seattle I saw that a couple of children, they were not able to do it properly because they were very small. So when they used to stitch the pieces, sometimes the needle goes into their fingers and blood comes out, they shove it and they start working. And I was talking to those children, if you are allowed, what is your dream life? All the boys looked at each other and smiled in helplessness, in helplessness. One of them said, what is dream? He said, if suddenly a parish pastor comes and asks you what you wanted to become in your life, what you wanted to do in your life, and then after sometime one of the children said, if we have an opportunity, I would love to kick a real football in a playground. We have denied freedom to our children. We have denied childhood to our children. We have denied educational health to our children. We have denied the future opportunities to our children. But the biggest crime we are doing to our children is that we have denied their dreams. Our children could be better, the worst. No other sin could be worse. People you have courage, you have anger in you. You have power and peace laureate, source of positive energy, self-interest and egos, which could be converted into social good, generate ideas out of anger, generate action out of anger. Or you are full of passion, you are full of positive and constructive anger. Please give me that positive and constructive anger that is called manu in Sanskrit. Manu's literal meaning in Sanskrit is anger. Keep dreams in the eyes of children. They need you. I aged five years sitting outside of my school. That was the first day of my schooling. I saw something is wrong somewhere. When I entered into my classroom, something is missing. A cobbler boy who was sitting outside, jute, saaf karnevala, bacha was missing. And I asked my teacher, sir, why is he not in school with all of us? I asked my headmaster, I asked my family and friends and everyone and each one of them tried to tell me, oh, they are poor children. It's very common. I refused to accept the conventional wisdom accepting wrongs as usual or common. I refused to accept that. And then I gathered all my courage and one day I went close to the father of the boy. And I asked, sir, Babu ji, why don't you send your son to school? He looked at me. It was a very tough question. Then he said, no, no, I am not Babu ji. You are Babu ji. You are Babu ji. What are you talking about? He said that I never thought about it. My father started working since childhood. I started working since childhood and so is my son. Nothing is new in it. And then with the deep emotion of misery on his face, he said, he answered in fact, Babu ji, we were born to work. Sir, we are born to work. This was his answer. But this was a question for me to hold my life that why some people are born to work at the cost of their childhood and freedom and dreams and education. And why someone like me was born with aspirations and dreams and my parents always wanted to make me an engineer that I became later on. I was 11 year old. I saw that many of my friends were leaving schools because their parents could not afford textbooks. Very expensive. Now education is more or less free. Textbooks are also free in many states. But it was not the case 50 years ago. This I did. On the day when the school results were announced, I was 11 year old. Me and some of my friends had borrowed a four wheel rickshaw. Not rickshaw. Thela. This is the rickshaw that sells vegetables. The pull cart. So I stood up on that and my friend was pulling turn by turn with it. And it was the day when the school results were being announced. But he was happy. Most of the people were joyful. And I went in neighborhood, started talking to the people there. Why? Sir, my dear aunties, uncles, cha-cha, cha-chi, dhu-a, dhu-pa, mata-pita. It's a great day for you because your children or grandchildren, your nephews and nieces, sisters and brothers have gone to the next grade. But think of those children who have left schooling in between. No books for that. But from now onwards, all your textbooks would go waste. So may I request you to put those books in my thela? And I'll tell you that within four hours I was able to collect more than 2,500 books. And those books belong to different classes and grades and university. I had no idea who will use those books. So I sought some help from my teachers and others. And then we have created a book bank where hundreds of children could be benefited. The leader is in you, my young friends. The change is in you, my young friends. None of you is 11. I think all of you are 16, 17, 18, 20, 21. When I challenge these wrongs, I have this technology which you have in your hands. I have to write a letter to the chief minister. Then I have to write, sometimes I have to go to just one or two shops in my town, the typing shops. So you have to queue up in the typing shop. They type, they made many mistakes and then you have to correct it and then retype. And then make the photocopy which was not also easy. And then you go and make a complaint to the chief minister. Now the technology in your fingers, the power in your fingers. I see that whenever I am in my office, I am sitting with two or four daughters of the office. I am getting calls from them. I am typing again and again. I understand that something is going on. I encourage them. My own daughter has grown up and she studied in America and she does not want to stay there so she came back and did her MBA from India, from Indian School of Business. But suddenly me and my wife noticed that she was doing taxing all the time. So I called her up. I said, something is cooking up. Yes, papa, who is that guy? We met that guy and finally the daughter-in-law was married recently. Good thing. Don't go and ask about Sadhu. She is our Kabir Das. That is why don't go and ask about the son-in-law. And don't go and ask about the daughter-in-law. But now there is a lot of confusion in the name of caste. So the taxing, SMS, WhatsApp, all kinds of things, social media, Twitter, those things are in your hands. If you see something wrong around you, it won't take more than a minute to write to the chief minister. Chief minister saab ka, aaj jaane se pehle, bhoa bhaiya, aaj noona le, bhoot acheh acheh baate gari. I am not going to leave you. You feel if you see that some boys or girls, especially the girls, keep your eyes open, my friends, young friends and older also. Nobody is old if you see that the traffickers, their faces are unknown. They are standing, some of them are standing at bus stops in small cities and towns. Many of them could be traffickers. They might have come from Punjab or from Haryana or from Delhi. Write to the police and the chief minister. Chief minister saab ka email address abhi sab log le le na. Jis sab mein bhoopin aajari ka, aap ek saath kaam bhi kar kate. Ka bhoopinda hai, bhoopinda ka. Bhoopinda ka, unke picture pe bhi kaam kiya hai. To deko abhi da kumar se kuch nahi hota hai. Aap sab log, a change maker, a champion decides in most of the times, it remains torment, it remains sleep-free, not happen in a country. Young people are in it. Perhaps we, adults, have not been able to give some good directions. So instead of misusing the social media, social media for the protection of children in Assam and in the whole country, in the whole world. Something is going wrong against the children. Just resist it, oppose it. You can get involved in it. And when you are doing something good, much of your time will go in doing something good for the world instead of getting into the wrong path. Dear friends, we can bring about change. When I started my fight or my humble efforts against child slavery and child labour, it was an only swing in India and elsewhere in the world. It was a serious problem but it was...