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ITALIAN CITIZENSHIP THROUGH PARENTS, GRANDPARENTS, & GREAT GRANDPARENTS
I've been hearing from my friends of Irish descent about getting their Irish citizenship and decided to look into getting Italian citizenship. The link above shows what documents you would need and I was wondering if anyone might know if any of these documents are in a box in the attic or something? just planning my future health care plans...lol Love Randy Documents You Will Need to Obtain Italian CitizenshipYou will need to complete an application form for Italian citizenship but there are also documents which need to be obtained for your parent, grandparent or great grandparent. It*s also essential that these documents are *apostilled and translated into Italian by a translator approved by?. Birth Certificate?每 Certificate from the commune in which your parent, grandparent or great grandparent was born. Death Certificate?每 If your parent, grandparent or great grandparent has since passed, you will need to obtain a death certificate. Marriage Certificate?每 Applicable if your parent(s) or grandparent(s) happened to get married in Italy. Naturalization Certificate?每 If no passport or citizen ID is available, you will need a naturalization certification for your parent, grandparent or great grandparent. Personal Certificates?每 You should submit your birth certificate and marriage/?certifications if applicable. |
羲堁极郤Randy: ? ? They charge at least a $150 processing fee. ? Mike ? From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
On Behalf Of Rand
Sent: Thursday, March 25, 2021 1:55 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [lafamigliaruggieri] ITALIAN CITIZENSHIP THROUGH PARENTS, GRANDPARENTS, & GREAT GRANDPARENTS ?
Documents You Will Need to Obtain Italian CitizenshipYou will need to complete an application form for Italian citizenship but there are also documents which need to be obtained for your parent, grandparent or great grandparent. It*s also essential that these documents are *apostilled and translated into Italian by a translator approved by?. Birth Certificate?每 Certificate from the commune in which your parent, grandparent or great grandparent was born. Death Certificate?每 If your parent, grandparent or great grandparent has since passed, you will need to obtain a death certificate. Marriage Certificate?每 Applicable if your parent(s) or grandparent(s) happened to get married in Italy. Naturalization Certificate?每 If no passport or citizen ID is available, you will need a naturalization certification for your parent, grandparent or great grandparent. Personal Certificates?每 You should submit your birth certificate and marriage/?certifications if applicable. |
羲堁极郤Two friends in my Italian class tried it. One succeeded. The other one has hit one hurdle after another. Vince voted in one of their last elections. My other friend, Rosa, is the one still trying and the embassy or consulate in Philly is holding up the whole process. Neither one is thinking of living there. Lonie collected lots of documents, but I*ve never seen Pop's Italian birth certificate . The only thing that might be helpful would be something from the town hall in Sant*Omero. Lonie, Becky, and I went there and their records go back a ways. We found my grandfather listed there. Lonie was much more interested in those things than I. But, I was impressed with the office and how quickly the clerk came out with a ledger the side of ?a wall paper sample book. And, was nice about it.
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Let me get this straight. Are you wanting to change citizenship? Are you wanting to obtain dual citizenship? Why??They are two separate things. Last time I looked, our State Department had some dire warnings regarding these endeavors. Especially with the dual route. US Embassies in foreign lands could (in emergencies) punt you off to fend for yourself because you are a citizen at home in your new country and conceivably don*t need their help,?as they would be obliged to help US only?citizens first. You jokingly (I think) mentioned health care concerns. Some look to this route for tax purposes. If you don*t plan to go the expat route and live in another country forever, again I ask why?
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I*m in favor of you trying to locate the documents needed if only to have them for family records. Search on. Steve Ruggieri 414-630-2558 On Thursday, March 25, 2021, 15:12, Elaine Ruggieri <elaineruggieri@...> wrote:
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I've thought about doing this before. Not so much for dual citizenship but more for an Italian passport when traveling abroad. I'd also like to spend a week in Cuba without doing the cultural requirements. With an Italian passport you can go easily. I'm too old and not looking for work but if you had the dual citizenship you could work anywhere in the EU. A decade back I dated a Spanish professor from Catalonia who wanted me to move to Spain and bartend. Tempting, but she was batshit Morticia Addams crazy. Fun, but nuts.? Pete On Thu, Mar 25, 2021 at 1:55 PM Rand <rprugged@...> wrote:
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Some of the language in this ※advice§ from the US State Department seems ominous enough to me that ones risks exposed need to be weighed very carefully against possible ease of travel. Steve Ruggieri 414-630-2558 On Sunday, May 30, 2021, 14:18, Pete R <lancaster505@...> wrote:
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Hi All, This is Mike Jr, but a buddy of mine got his italian passport via his Italian grandfather and it took him over a year and a half to get everything approved. That was pre-covid. But, I remember?talking to him about it and it was a grueling process.? On Mon, May 31, 2021 at 3:05 PM Steve Ruggieri via <sjrugged=[email protected]> wrote:
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