112canadacalling said:
It's a shame that I have no clue as to how my father acquired his citizenship. My aunts were not required to resume citizenship and believe it has something to do with when he was born. I'm so pleased to finally have found out that I was not subject to loss after being told for the last 10 years that I was no longer a citizen. I'd like very much to find out for sure what needs to be done for my children. Do you think the best thing to do re my children's citizenship, would be apply and hope for the best?
You mentioned that you visited Canada and picked up a passport, but you never told us that you applied for and received a replacement Certificate of Citizenship. However, I'm sure you must have done so, since I can't see how a Canadian passport would have been issued to you without one. So, on the application for proof of citizenship, did you supply the number of your father's Certificate of Citizenship from 1975? As I mentioned before, a Resumption is a Grant, meaning that your father was not, in 1975, considered to be a citizen by descent, but rather by Grant. In other words, he had the same status as a naturalized citizen. The circumstances of his initial immigration to Canada, his "registration" in 1965, etc. are very unclear, since birth to a Canadian woman before 1977 provided no citizenship status...unless the woman was unmarried.
In any case, the simplest thing to do is to submit applications for your children, making clear that your father was granted Canadian citizenship in 1975.