Any customs officer who doesn't understand the possibility that someone may be a citizen of more than one country at a time should be fired. Your right though, always use the passport of the country you are entering......Leon said:You are automatically a Canadian citizen because your mother is. You have to apply for a citizenship certificate, see http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/citizenship/proof.asp to prove your citizenship. When you get it, you can use it to apply for a Canadian passport. As a dual citizen, you should always use your US passport to travel to and from the US and your Canadian passport to travel to and from Canada but do not waive both of them around at the same time as it will confuse the customs officers.
Read my answer above and follow the instructions.jamie168227 said:Hi my name is Jamie M. Brandt and I use to live in Canada 6 years ago and I want to move back there is year, my family lives there and I miss them very much. I had dual Citizenship of both places and I lost the paper that I got from the Courthouse when my family and I moved there in 1997. So what I want to now is how can I get a new Immigration paper to move back home. Please write back soon because I want to move back in the next couple of months. Thanks again Jamie
links18 said:Any customs officer who doesn't understand the possibility that someone may be a citizen of more than one country at a time should be fired. Your right though, always use the passport of the country you are entering......Leon said:You are automatically a Canadian citizen because your mother is. You have to apply for a citizenship certificate, see http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/citizenship/proof.asp to prove your citizenship. When you get it, you can use it to apply for a Canadian passport. As a dual citizen, you should always use your US passport to travel to and from the US and your Canadian passport to travel to and from Canada but do not waive both of them around at the same time as it will confuse the customs officers.
Yes, all customs officer know about dual passports but it can still create confusion. When I traveled to UK from my home country and then return to US (where I am living now), the embassy guy from the UK who was at the airport insisted that the Americans would not let me know into their country. He was prepared to let me into the UK but he was worried about my subsequent trip (out of concern not out of being difficult). I had to convince him that he should let me deal with the Americans. As for the Americans, they never seem to care as long as you are legally entering their country.links18 said:Any customs officer who doesn't understand the possibility that someone may be a citizen of more than one country at a time should be fired. Your right though, always use the passport of the country you are entering......Leon said:You are automatically a Canadian citizen because your mother is. You have to apply for a citizenship certificate, see http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/citizenship/proof.asp to prove your citizenship. When you get it, you can use it to apply for a Canadian passport. As a dual citizen, you should always use your US passport to travel to and from the US and your Canadian passport to travel to and from Canada but do not waive both of them around at the same time as it will confuse the customs officers.