scenario:
My father is Serbian with Serbian citizenship. My mother ethnic origin/nationality is German, but she has never had German passport-citizenship. She was born in Yugoslavia-Serbia. It's the same case with mom's parents.
My grandparents were Volksdeutsche-Donau Schwabien (ethnic Germans). What i found out is this :"Enlisting in the "Prinz Eugen" division automatically conferred German citizenship on the recruit.",as my Grandpa was in his division, it means that he had German citizenship at one moment. All my family from my mom side live in Germany now,they emigrated after war or earlier.When war was over my Grandpa was sent to Tito's communist camp. One of his child died in some other camp for Germans and YU communists took his house and other properties. After the liberation he remained to live in Serbia. Based on this short info does anybody know do i have chance to get German citizenship?
Please do not paste wikipedia links as they are not so helpful in my case.
For example i know that lot of Poland people have dual citizenship because of that... I guess that law Is the same for every country..
German citizenship!?
- Posted:
- 3+ months ago by nepredvidiv
- Topics:
- mother, father, german, passport, origin, ethnic, immigration, nationality, citizenship, mothers
Details:
Responses (1)
I don't think you will have much luck basing your application on these historic ancestral links, although it could support an application founded on more concrete grounds. For example, if you have already lived many years in Germany and speak German as well. Easiest is to be married to a German. Most people from non-EU states just claim Asylum these days, it's quicker. Or wait until Serbia is in the EU.