The "We are Sikhs" campaign was years in the making, funded by Sikh leaders and their families across a dozen cities, who have been swept up in anti-Muslim sentiment since the September 11 attacks.
Their beards and turbans symbols of equality in a religion that opposes India's caste system make American Sikhs easy targets for the angry and uninformed.
"Our hope was that as the memory of 9/11 goes down, things would get better. But they have not," said Rajwant Singh, a dentist from suburban Washington and one of the campaign's volunteer organisers.
Rather, they feature Sikh families explaining how the world's fifth-largest religion, founded in India, aligns with American values.
Internet advertising will begin immediately as well, and subsequent TV ads are planned for at least three more cities with large Sikh populations.
"We teach our kids the American values go hand in hand with the Sikh values: tolerance, religious freedom, gender equality," a bearded man in a red turban says in one of the ads shared with The Associated Press.
The ads, developed in consultation with Republican and Democratic consulting firms, do not mention Republican President Donald Trump, whose candidacy hammered on illegal immigration and Islamic extremism.
While fundraising events in Sikh communities across the nation coincided with Trump's rise, organisers insist the USD 1.3 million effort has no connection to the tough-talking president.
"It's a coincidence," says Gurwin Ahuja, a 27-year-old political operative who also helped organise the new campaign. "Administrations have changed, and we still experience violence regardless of who's president."
Corey Saylor, spokesman for the Council on American- Islamic Relations, praised the new effort, noting that Sikh leaders have "not allowed bias to divide religious minorities.
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