Jouman Hamade blended the candy-red and white paint on her palm until it matched her blush-pink scarf. Then she pressed her hand next to other handprints covering up the hateful message slapped onto a Washington Avenue Bridge panel for the Muslim Student Association (MSA) last week.
Her action was part of Friday's repainting event on the bridge, which connects the east and west banks of the University of Minnesota campus, to redesign the panel after the word "ISIS" was discovered spray-painted across it on Nov. 3. The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) has called the vandalism a hate crime.
More than 30 students added their painted handprints to the colorful collection on the panel.
"It makes me smile and want to be on campus with everyone," said Hamade, MSA's coordinator.
The group had advertised its event as a way to show that "bigotry does not tear us apart, but rather brings us together."
Students got creative, adding the colors of the U.S. flag and hearts inside their handprints. Nearby, a sign from another organization read: "Hate cannot drive out hate. Only love can do that."
Some passersby stopped to add their handprints and to offer support to the MSA, and a "Muslims are welcome here" sign appeared next to the panel.
It was a show of love and unity following Tuesday's election of Donald Trump as the new U.S. president. Trump's campaign statements about women, immigrants and Muslims have caused many to fear that such incidents as the panel's vandalism may happen more often.