Hi all,
I recently lost my mother to kidney failure in December 2023. My eldest sister could not attend the funeral because she was unable to get leave from her job. She lives in Toronto with her husband, three kids, and her Mother-in-law (father-in-law is deceased), might I add, they own their own home since that is a big achievement nowadays in Canada.
My father wants to visit her in Toronto but I am not sure if his visitor visa will be approved since my sister is an asylum seeker from Pakistan (Minority group), she has however, obtained her Canadian passport last year and became a citizen.
For the record, my father has never previously applied for a Visa to Canada but did get US B1/B2 rejected last month, will this affect his chances?
If I request her to send a letter of invitation to my father, will that make or break his case? Some context: My father is well into his 70s and has no intentions to stay in Canada and since I am currently in University, I can put myself as a home-tie to origin country for my father.
This is what I have currently come up with when it comes to building a strong case with a solid purpose of travel + home ties. Lmk if there are any changes I should make or If I have it wrong altogether.
Looking forward to your responses.
I recently lost my mother to kidney failure in December 2023. My eldest sister could not attend the funeral because she was unable to get leave from her job. She lives in Toronto with her husband, three kids, and her Mother-in-law (father-in-law is deceased), might I add, they own their own home since that is a big achievement nowadays in Canada.
My father wants to visit her in Toronto but I am not sure if his visitor visa will be approved since my sister is an asylum seeker from Pakistan (Minority group), she has however, obtained her Canadian passport last year and became a citizen.
For the record, my father has never previously applied for a Visa to Canada but did get US B1/B2 rejected last month, will this affect his chances?
If I request her to send a letter of invitation to my father, will that make or break his case? Some context: My father is well into his 70s and has no intentions to stay in Canada and since I am currently in University, I can put myself as a home-tie to origin country for my father.
This is what I have currently come up with when it comes to building a strong case with a solid purpose of travel + home ties. Lmk if there are any changes I should make or If I have it wrong altogether.
Looking forward to your responses.