Anonymous wrote:What is the benefit of doing this? You aren't going to move to Europe.
Anonymous wrote:I've looked into it. It can get a little tricky because borders have moved.
For instance, my grandparents were Polish, and came over to America in the late 1800s when all these present-day-countries were under the Austro-Hungarian Empire. However, after WW2 the lines were redrawn and their villages are now in the Western Ukraine. So does that mean we look toward Polish citizenship or Ukrainian? Messy!
Anonymous wrote:I am interested. My cousins all made sure to get citizenship in EU but I didn't pursue anything like that.
Honestly, the U.S. has changed before our eyes. It'll be a third world nation before I'm old.
I'm not keen on picking up and leaving, but I'd like to have options for the future. The day the U.S. blatantly turns into a police state is the day I'm leaving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse did it for German citizenship for himself and our kids, via a Jewish grandparent (rest of the family killed in the Holocaust). He had to collect a bunch of paperwork but it was all doable. Took about 2 years from start to finish.
what kind of paperwork? we’re jewish and my grandmother grew up in germany (she’s still alive), she and her parents survived concentration camps and came to the US when she was a teen. I can’t even imagine where to start looking for paperwork or what kind of paperwork I’d need?
It’s clearly laid out on their website. Essentially you need to prove that your German relative was Jewish, that he lived in Germany during the Nazi regime, the birth certificates showing the relationship between that relative and you. In our case, the grandparent was able to leave Germany, and had his old passport (with a J stamped on it).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse did it for German citizenship for himself and our kids, via a Jewish grandparent (rest of the family killed in the Holocaust). He had to collect a bunch of paperwork but it was all doable. Took about 2 years from start to finish.
what kind of paperwork? we’re jewish and my grandmother grew up in germany (she’s still alive), she and her parents survived concentration camps and came to the US when she was a teen. I can’t even imagine where to start looking for paperwork or what kind of paperwork I’d need?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse did it for German citizenship for himself and our kids, via a Jewish grandparent (rest of the family killed in the Holocaust). He had to collect a bunch of paperwork but it was all doable. Took about 2 years from start to finish.
what kind of paperwork? we’re jewish and my grandmother grew up in germany (she’s still alive), she and her parents survived concentration camps and came to the US when she was a teen. I can’t even imagine where to start looking for paperwork or what kind of paperwork I’d need?
Anonymous wrote:Spouse did it for German citizenship for himself and our kids, via a Jewish grandparent (rest of the family killed in the Holocaust). He had to collect a bunch of paperwork but it was all doable. Took about 2 years from start to finish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents and siblings were born in Croatia.i never applied for citizenship. What would yhe benefit be?
Benefit would be EU passport. Can live and work in EU, kids attend some EU universities for low cost. Downside could be taxes.