“One of our main ideas is, in general, to move forward, and to double our efforts in good things,” Rabbi Levi Fogelman said. “That itself makes negativity dissipate when you shed light. . So what we did was we met at the bridge, and we sort of reclaimed the bridge as a positive place.”
Dozens of people marched in the rain in response to the symbol of hate, which a woman covered up with chalk art and the message: "Hate has no place here."