Hey Lenium,lenium said:Hi, I finally took my oath yesterday and became Canadian!
There were 94 candidates at our ceremony. There were two ceremonies scheduled for yesterday, so I would say in total 200 people got their citizenship yesterday.
this is frustrating , i start to worry from my end after i saw canadafrenzy who applied on december2014 having oath on october 6th .buzz123 said:It seems like the Edmonton office has finally ended their drought of citizenship ceremonies. No update on ECAS yet at my end. Wonder how long it will take before I'm called to attend a ceremony.
abdul560 said:this is frustrating , i start to worry from my end after i saw canadafrenzy who applied on december2014 having oath on october 6th .
trust me i have been patient so far.andrew7007 said:Calm down and patience buddy. I understand its frustrating. Call them up and see what they say. All the best and cheer up.
mamunkanak said:Hey Guys,
I have a question, during the interview (after the citizenship test) I was asked to sign the page where the officer took notes but he covered it up so that I can't see what his notes say, is it natural? Did any of you have the same experience?
Thanks a lot
Maybe depends on the officer. I think everybody will need to sign the form. My officer didn't cover anything, he even pointed out the notes to me. But I can remember that more than one members of this forum said that it was covered by the officer.mamunkanak said:Hey Guys,
I have a question, during the interview (after the citizenship test) I was asked to sign the page where the officer took notes but he covered it up so that I can't see what his notes say, is it natural? Did any of you have the same experience?
Thanks a lot
mamunkanak said:Hey Guys,
I have a question, during the interview (after the citizenship test) I was asked to sign the page where the officer took notes but he covered it up so that I can't see what his notes say, is it natural? Did any of you have the same experience?
Thanks a lot
Thats correc! Few other members experienced the same thing, however, my wife did not have to sign anything at the end of the interview....CarsonYEG said:Maybe depends on the officer. I think everybody will need to sign the form. My officer didn't cover anything, he even pointed out the notes to me. But I can remember that more than one members of this forum said that it was covered by the officer.
My wife was also asked those questions, I am sure those are pretty general questions for most of the applicants during interview.ERJOPA said:Not only did I have to sign a paper (that she hid the contents of from me), the officer also asked questions that were straight from the RQ (like, how long have you worked, any close relatives in your former country, is my wife Canadian, ect, ect, ect). It made me wonder if she was going to issue me an RQ, but she didn't, and then proceded to admonish me for not having any passport stamps.