Excerpt:
Stories about Dutch Moroccan youths verbally abusing or physically threatening Jews crop up fairly frequently in the Dutch media, and politicians - especially Geert Wilders and the Freedom Party - call for hard measures against "Moroccan street terrorists". What's it like to live in the Netherlands if you're both Jewish and Moroccan?
Victor Bohbot, 56, has seen the climate in the Netherlands change over the years: "I came here in 1974, the entire country was pro Israel. When I was a soldier in the IDF, met lots of Dutch truck drivers who would come to Israel to volunteer."
Until very recently, Victor ran a number of restaurants in Amsterdam, Deventer and Bussum. In 1984, he and his family left 'for good' and went back to Israel. However, four years later they were back in the Netherlands. "It's difficult. What am I? For the Dutch, I'm a foreigner but I'm also not a real Israeli or Moroccan".