Hi all,
Firstly, I'm not trying to get advice that I'm a Canadian... I'm not Canadian... but in doing some research for my family tree I found an interesting quirk in the 1st/2nd Generation born overseas rules on Canadian Citizenship.
Ok, so my Grandfather was born in Ontario in 1912. Moved to Australia in the 1930's. So he would have become Canadian on 1 Jan 1947 with the way the Citizenship was created. He always considered himself Canadian, even got a Canadian pension. Never took Australian Citizenship.
Easy so far.
My Father was born in Australia in 1940. He would have become Canadian on 1 Jan 1947, as he was born to a Canadian Parent. Section 4(b)(i) of the 1947 Act covered him. He would have lost his Citizenship as he didn't file to retain it when he was 21, but he would have had it reinstated in the 2009 changes. So he is Canadian.
Still easy so far.
The quirk.... he is both a First Generation born overseas and a "Zero" Generation.
How so? Well, the 2009 Act makes it pretty clear he is considered 1st Generation abroad when it reinstated his Citizenship, and so someone like me is 2nd Generation and can't be Canadian. He was born overseas to a Canadian Parent, and so is first Generation overseas.
But there was a clause in the 1947 Act, which gave him his initial citizenship, that deals with subsequent children which read,
5. A person, born after the commencement of this Act, is a natural-born Canadian citizen:-
(a) if he is born in Canada or on a Canadian Ship;
or
(b) if he is born outside of Canada elsewhere than on a Canadian ship, and
Section 5(b)(ii) then talks about the registration of birth....
So, as you can see his Children (my generation) would have been in a class that made us equivalent to First Generation had my Father been a Canadian at the time of the birth. He wasn't... he had lost it through the non-retention clause at the point my sisters and I were born in the late 1960's, and so we are not Canadian, as he wasn't a Citizen at the time of our births.
But, because he was born before 1947 he fell into a "special" class who could be considered a generation "zero" even though he was born overseas, and his children considered first generation abroad. Until the 2009 Act, which changed his generation status to being first generation, and his children to second generation.
It's particular to those born overseas to Canadian born parents, and who became one of the original Canadian citizens on 1 Jan 1947.
As I said.... just an interesting quirk i found while researching the family tree....
Firstly, I'm not trying to get advice that I'm a Canadian... I'm not Canadian... but in doing some research for my family tree I found an interesting quirk in the 1st/2nd Generation born overseas rules on Canadian Citizenship.
Ok, so my Grandfather was born in Ontario in 1912. Moved to Australia in the 1930's. So he would have become Canadian on 1 Jan 1947 with the way the Citizenship was created. He always considered himself Canadian, even got a Canadian pension. Never took Australian Citizenship.
Easy so far.
My Father was born in Australia in 1940. He would have become Canadian on 1 Jan 1947, as he was born to a Canadian Parent. Section 4(b)(i) of the 1947 Act covered him. He would have lost his Citizenship as he didn't file to retain it when he was 21, but he would have had it reinstated in the 2009 changes. So he is Canadian.
Still easy so far.
The quirk.... he is both a First Generation born overseas and a "Zero" Generation.
How so? Well, the 2009 Act makes it pretty clear he is considered 1st Generation abroad when it reinstated his Citizenship, and so someone like me is 2nd Generation and can't be Canadian. He was born overseas to a Canadian Parent, and so is first Generation overseas.
But there was a clause in the 1947 Act, which gave him his initial citizenship, that deals with subsequent children which read,
5. A person, born after the commencement of this Act, is a natural-born Canadian citizen:-
(a) if he is born in Canada or on a Canadian Ship;
or
(b) if he is born outside of Canada elsewhere than on a Canadian ship, and
(i) his father, or in the case of a child born out of wedlock, his mother, at the time of that persons birth, is a Canadian citizen by reason of having been born in Canada or on a Canadian Ship, or having been granted a certificate of citizenship or having been a Canadian citizen at the commencement of this Act, and
Section 5(b)(ii) then talks about the registration of birth....
So, as you can see his Children (my generation) would have been in a class that made us equivalent to First Generation had my Father been a Canadian at the time of the birth. He wasn't... he had lost it through the non-retention clause at the point my sisters and I were born in the late 1960's, and so we are not Canadian, as he wasn't a Citizen at the time of our births.
But, because he was born before 1947 he fell into a "special" class who could be considered a generation "zero" even though he was born overseas, and his children considered first generation abroad. Until the 2009 Act, which changed his generation status to being first generation, and his children to second generation.
It's particular to those born overseas to Canadian born parents, and who became one of the original Canadian citizens on 1 Jan 1947.
As I said.... just an interesting quirk i found while researching the family tree....