this post was submitted on 30 Mar 2025
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Caffè Italia

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Hi! Sorry if I can't write this post in Italian, I learnt Italian in school but didn't have the occasion to practice for more than a decade… thus I'm more than a little rusted! But I still understand, if you accept that I answer in English you can answer me in Italian.

Yesterday, I learnt that my great-grandfather, who flew fascism and came to France, never became French. Thus, if I understand correctly what I have read, my grandfather, as the son of an Italian, was Italian, even if he never asked for his nationality to be recognized. And this nationality comes further to me.

Does it actually works like that? If I prove that my great-grandfather was Italian when my grandfather was born, could I acquire the Italian nationality?

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[–] Moonrise2473@feddit.it 2 points 6 days ago

In order to get that you need to have submitted the request for citizenship before 27 march 2025. They changed the law after that, before any kind of relative born in the 1800s was enough (a bit ridiculous imho), now only up to parent or grandparent.

[–] qwe@feddit.it 2 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

Read this, then run to an Italian consulate and see if/how you can start the procedure. Do it on the double because the law is about to change.

[–] choss@sh.itjust.works 4 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

Hey just so you know, a change to this law was approved just a couple of days ago. I don't think it has passed yet but it is fully expected to. I'm not totally familiar with all of the consequences, and there may be an exception for you, but this excerpt seems relevant to you:

"The decree-law approved today states that Italian descendants born abroad will automatically be citizens for only two generations: only those with at least one parent or grandparent born in Italy will be citizens from birth."

I'm really sorry

Reddit link with more info

[–] zloubida@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago

Oh crap 😅.

But in my case it would still work for my mother I think. And after my mother is recognized Italian, I could too. So, again if I understood correctly it would still work, but I'd need one more step. And to convince my mother.

[–] abeltramo@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

La procedura per il riconoscimento si sviluppa nei passaggi di seguito indicati:

accertare che la discendenza abbia inizio da un avo italiano (non ci sono limiti di generazioni); accertare che l’avo cittadino italiano abbia mantenuto la cittadinanza sino alla nascita del discendente. La mancata naturalizzazione o la data di un’eventuale naturalizzazione dell’avo deve essere comprovata mediante attestazione rilasciata dalla competente Autorità straniera; comprovare la discendenza dall’avo italiano mediante gli atti di stato civile di nascita e di matrimonio; atti che devono essere in regola con la legalizzazione, se richiesta, e muniti di traduzione ufficiale.

The main point here is that you could get citizenship from your great-grandfather only if he was still Italian when you were born IIUC.

Would that be still the case for you? Would any of the family members in between be Italian by any chance?

[–] zloubida@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Graziemille per la tua risposta!

My great-grandfather died before the birth of my mother, his granddaughter. However I understand this:

attestare che né l’istante né gli ascendenti hanno mai rinunciato alla cittadinanza italiana interrompendo la catena di trasmissione della cittadinanza, mediante appositi certificati rilasciati dalle competenti Autorità diplomatico consolari italiane.

as the idea that, as long as none of my ancestors renounced their Italian nationality, they are considered Italian even if they never had an Italian ID. If my interpretation is correct, my “avo italiano” is my mother.