Danny Roup, Israel's celebrity weatherman, does not necessarily see clouds on the geopolitical horizon. But he thought it worth digging into his centuries-old family roots in order to get a second, Portuguese passport.
Roup is among thousands of Israelis who have embraced a citizenship offer by Portugal to descendants of Sephardic Jews who were expelled from the Iberian peninsula during the medieval Inquisition.
"You can never know what will happen in this region in the next 20, 30, 40, 50, 100 years. So it's always good to have another passport, especially if it's a European passport," said Roup, 54.
Around 300,000 Jews lived in Spain when, in 1492, monarchs Isabella and Ferdinand ordered them and the country's Muslims to convert to Catholicism or leave.
Tens of thousands fled to Portugal, only to be persecuted there or expelled in 1496.
Portugal, which has seen a rise in applications since a similar citizenship offer to Sephardic Jews by Spain ended in October, describes its policy in terms of redress.
"Our history is a very important one but with certain shadows - and one of the most relevant shadows was forcing the Jews to abandon the country or to convert to Christianity," said Portuguese Foreign Minister Augusto Santos Silva.
"We lost a lot of our Jewish influence and we are trying to retrieve this influence."
The citizenship application takes around two years. Some 20 percent are approved.
Experts at one of Portugal's Jewish centers, Lisbon or Porto, vet applicants' genealogies and look for evidence of interest in Sephardi culture - for example, knowledge of the Judaeo-Spanish dialect Ladino.
Lisbon-based immigration lawyer Renato Martins said many of his Sephardic clients see the "investment potential" of a Portuguese passport, especially for real-estate.
Silva said most of the 44,000 applications received since the Portuguese offer opened in 2015 have been from Israel.
Ilan Dahan, 48, a father-of-three originally from Haifa, moved to Portugal after being approved in 2017.
"There were lots of wars, lots of bullets. We wanted to be safe, especially with kids," he said.
Roup does not want to leave Israel but says Portuguese citizenship could help his children, who can apply as adults.
"One is a singer. My daughter is an actress. So it will open doors," he said. "I'm trying to make their lives easier now, in the present, and in the future."