The resulting sculpture, called "My light is your light", is a set of custom-made white neon lights that
"look like extremely fragile human bones". For Minawi, the entire piece is a stripped down version of
one particular family in Lebanon whose story affected him deeply.
"They're crossing the border," Minawi says. "The father is in front watching out for the family.
The grandfather trails behind him, bent over and exhausted. The mother is walking forward but looking down.
The teenager has been left behind. He's just as traumatized as everyone else, but they don't notice.
There's also an aunt and a little child."
A message of hope for refugees
According to Minawi, the installation has a message not only for Europeans, but also for refugees themselves.
"I want to tell them that you shine light and you can move on," he says.
"There are five statues whose heads are all down. Except for the little kid."
Unlike the older figures, the smallest child in the sculpture looks straight ahead,
and was intended as a symbol of hope and resilience.