Anonymous wrote:I am looking into different avenues for citizenship. DH was born to a mom who was burn under nazi germany. Left after the war. Could he get citizenship for himself and our kids through that line?
I am looking at getting citizenship through the country where I was born. However I would have to renounce my American citizenship if I did that.
Not sure if I could get my kids citizenship through my country but will also look at that.
However husband and wife would have different citizenship. Good or bad?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The last time I checked, the parent had to still be a German citizen at the time of the birth. My DH similarly had parents born in Germany but they became US citizens before he was born, and I guess gave up their German citizenship.
I don't think this is entirely true if you are Jewish. There are special rules for that. I know someone whose grandmother was Jewish and whose father (her son) was born during Nazi Germany. They moved to the US post war. He is applying for citizenship and seems to think he will get it. But there are some intricate rules about which dates, etc. It'a pretty case by case.
So OP yes your husband might have a shot at German citizenship and if so your kids would too.
I would not give up your American citizenship
Any German citizen (and their descendants) who was persecuted by the Nazis has a claim to German citizenship. Austria has a similar path. Definitely check the subreddits, they are very helpful and full of information. The rules for persecutees (who needn't be Jewish) are completely separate from the ordinary rules for citizenship by descent, so make sure you are researching the correct path for you.
DP. I feel like OP would have mentioned her MIL being in a persecuted group if it was the case? Jews were stripped of their citizenship in 1935. Two-thirds then emigrated. Of the remainder, 84% were exterminated either in camps or by the Einsatzgruppen. There are very few plausible avenues where the young child of parents in a persecuted group would have survived the entire war and left Germany only afterwards, sans a very intense story of being hidden or living under pretexts that OP should be privy to and would have presumably included in her post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The last time I checked, the parent had to still be a German citizen at the time of the birth. My DH similarly had parents born in Germany but they became US citizens before he was born, and I guess gave up their German citizenship.
I don't think this is entirely true if you are Jewish. There are special rules for that. I know someone whose grandmother was Jewish and whose father (her son) was born during Nazi Germany. They moved to the US post war. He is applying for citizenship and seems to think he will get it. But there are some intricate rules about which dates, etc. It'a pretty case by case.
So OP yes your husband might have a shot at German citizenship and if so your kids would too.
I would not give up your American citizenship
Any German citizen (and their descendants) who was persecuted by the Nazis has a claim to German citizenship. Austria has a similar path. Definitely check the subreddits, they are very helpful and full of information. The rules for persecutees (who needn't be Jewish) are completely separate from the ordinary rules for citizenship by descent, so make sure you are researching the correct path for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The last time I checked, the parent had to still be a German citizen at the time of the birth. My DH similarly had parents born in Germany but they became US citizens before he was born, and I guess gave up their German citizenship.
I don't think this is entirely true if you are Jewish. There are special rules for that. I know someone whose grandmother was Jewish and whose father (her son) was born during Nazi Germany. They moved to the US post war. He is applying for citizenship and seems to think he will get it. But there are some intricate rules about which dates, etc. It'a pretty case by case.
So OP yes your husband might have a shot at German citizenship and if so your kids would too.
I would not give up your American citizenship
Anonymous wrote:The last time I checked, the parent had to still be a German citizen at the time of the birth. My DH similarly had parents born in Germany but they became US citizens before he was born, and I guess gave up their German citizenship.
Anonymous wrote:Your DH must extremely old if he was born in Nazi occupied Germany. I think it is a little late to be trying to mover to Germany.