CharlieD10
VIP Member
- Sep 5, 2010
- 185
- 124
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- KGN
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 15-02-2011
- File Transfer...
- 09-05-2011
- Med's Done....
- 17-01-2011, 08-03-2012
- Interview........
- Waived
- Passport Req..
- 30-3-2012
- VISA ISSUED...
- 13-04-2012
- LANDED..........
- 06-06-2012
You didn't have a choice in being removed from Canada, that is something you have to make clear. Of course, you were a minor, so it's unlikely anyone asked your opinion, but it's always good to make that clear. (I wanted to go to a different HS from the one I was sent to at age 11, but my parents were willing to compromise when they saw how badly I wanted to go that particular school, and asked me to wait until I was at least 14 before transferring as it meant living away from home. My point with this personal example is that sometimes parents do take a child's opinion into consideration, so you want to make it clear that no-one ever asked you about leaving Canada, if that was the case with your parents.)
It's not about feeling sorry, or laying blame, the point of the letter is to make it clear that you didn't have a choice then, but you have a choice now and what you want more than anything is to come back to Canada, to attend school in Canada, and reside in Canada, so you want them to look favourably and compassionately on the request, in spite of the fact that you are not in compliance with the residency obligation.
It might work to your favour to point out that you didn't apply to go to school anywhere else except in Canada, because this is where you want to be. So, in your case, I would mention that. Point out that had you remained in Canada, you would not now need to contemplate the possibility that you either can't attend the university of your choice, or that if you do attend it you will have to pay the fees of an international student when you might have been entitled to pay the fees of a Canadian resident, through someone else's decision and choices. This could negatively impact your future plans and your financial planning strategies, and this creates additional stress.
Show all the consequences your parents' decisions have had, and continue to have, on you. They need to be solid, tangible consequences like those mentioned above, not trivialities. H&C is about undeserved hardship, not just hardship in general. The Officer evaluating your application needs to be moved to want to relieve your circumstances, not just feel sorry for you.
It's not about feeling sorry, or laying blame, the point of the letter is to make it clear that you didn't have a choice then, but you have a choice now and what you want more than anything is to come back to Canada, to attend school in Canada, and reside in Canada, so you want them to look favourably and compassionately on the request, in spite of the fact that you are not in compliance with the residency obligation.
It might work to your favour to point out that you didn't apply to go to school anywhere else except in Canada, because this is where you want to be. So, in your case, I would mention that. Point out that had you remained in Canada, you would not now need to contemplate the possibility that you either can't attend the university of your choice, or that if you do attend it you will have to pay the fees of an international student when you might have been entitled to pay the fees of a Canadian resident, through someone else's decision and choices. This could negatively impact your future plans and your financial planning strategies, and this creates additional stress.
Show all the consequences your parents' decisions have had, and continue to have, on you. They need to be solid, tangible consequences like those mentioned above, not trivialities. H&C is about undeserved hardship, not just hardship in general. The Officer evaluating your application needs to be moved to want to relieve your circumstances, not just feel sorry for you.