Hello all,
Just satisfying a curiosity and I am prepared to accept the answer is almost certainly no.
Neither I nor my parents were born in Canada.
My grandfather was born in the UK in 1929 but lived in Canada as an adult and naturalized as a Canadian citizen in 1979, before I was born. He then carried a Canadian passport for the rest of his life. However, he naturalized after my mother was born - she has no link whatsoever to Canada.
While I was born before the apparently all-important 2009 (so it would appear that there is some scope for citizenship by descent through grandparent), would any chain of citizenship through grandparents become broken if, despite my grandparent being Canadian, my parent is 100% not a Canadian citizen?
Logic would lead me to believe that the link/chain would indeed be broken, and it is thus impossible for me to have any claim. However, worth checking if anyone else has any experience/knowledge of this situation.
I also ask because on the "Proof of Citizenship" form (https://www.canada.ca/content/dam/ircc/migration/ircc/english/pdf/kits/citizen/cit0001e-2.pdf), it lets you tick "no" to either parent being Canadian, but then still guides you to the next section to fill in the information about your grandparents. So I wonder why it would let you do this if it was totally impossible to be a citizen if neither parent is Canadian.
Thanks, have a lovely day!
Tom
Just satisfying a curiosity and I am prepared to accept the answer is almost certainly no.
Neither I nor my parents were born in Canada.
My grandfather was born in the UK in 1929 but lived in Canada as an adult and naturalized as a Canadian citizen in 1979, before I was born. He then carried a Canadian passport for the rest of his life. However, he naturalized after my mother was born - she has no link whatsoever to Canada.
While I was born before the apparently all-important 2009 (so it would appear that there is some scope for citizenship by descent through grandparent), would any chain of citizenship through grandparents become broken if, despite my grandparent being Canadian, my parent is 100% not a Canadian citizen?
Logic would lead me to believe that the link/chain would indeed be broken, and it is thus impossible for me to have any claim. However, worth checking if anyone else has any experience/knowledge of this situation.
I also ask because on the "Proof of Citizenship" form (https://www.canada.ca/content/dam/ircc/migration/ircc/english/pdf/kits/citizen/cit0001e-2.pdf), it lets you tick "no" to either parent being Canadian, but then still guides you to the next section to fill in the information about your grandparents. So I wonder why it would let you do this if it was totally impossible to be a citizen if neither parent is Canadian.
Thanks, have a lovely day!
Tom