I miss out by one generation, but my mother should be eligible. Think she
can score me some of those cookies?


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123993183347727843.html?mod=yhoofront

Canada Issues a Wake-Up Call: You May Be a Citizen

By PHRED DVORAK

Thanks to a new law, Canada will bestow citizenship Friday on what its
government believes could be hundreds of thousands of unsuspecting
foreigners, most of them Americans.

The April 17 amendment to Canada's Citizenship Act automatically restores
Canadian nationality to many people forced to renounce it when they became
citizens of another country. It also grants citizenship to their children.

In the video 'Waking Up Canadian,' a man goes to sleep in a drab room and
wakes up to find out that he's become a citizen of Canada. Surrounded by
flags, maple-leaf-shaped cookies and a canister of maple syrup, he's
welcomed by a hockey player, two plush moose and a uniformed Mountie.
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The Canadian government doesn't know the precise number or location of
individuals affected by the legislation. But it believes most are U.S.
citizens, a spokeswoman for Canada's immigration office said. U.S.
Department of Homeland Security records show 240,000 Canadians were
naturalized in the U.S. from 1948 to 1977; the new law fixes problems that
occurred during those years.

To reach that amorphous group of beneficiaries, the Canadian government has
turned to YouTube. It's running an ad there titled "Waking up
Canadian,"<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDeDQpIQFD0>in which a man
awakens on April 17 to a room festooned with red-and-white
Canadian flags. He's met by a welcoming committee consisting of two stuffed
plush moose, a hockey player, and a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police.

Eligible individuals automatically become Canadian citizens. But they don't
get proof of that citizenship unless they apply for it, meaning other
countries -- including those that allow people to be citizens of only one
nation -- won't be alerted, according to the immigration office spokeswoman.
Those people also may renounce their citizenship rights, she said.

The citizenship bonanza is the byproduct of a decadeslong struggle by a
motley group of people who claim they were unfairly denied or lost their
Canadian nationality. Canadian families who crossed the border in 1947 to
1977 to have their babies in a U.S. hospital found those children weren't
recognized as Canadians unless the families registered them with the
government. Some foreign brides of Canadian World War II servicemen lost
their citizenship if they stayed out of the country for a decade or more.

Then there are the Canadian Mennonites who moved to Mexico in the 1920s to
the 1960s. When their children and grandchildren returned to Canada, many
found their nationality unclear.

Some such cases languished in litigation for years. Others surfaced in 2007,
when new U.S. rules requiring passports for travel between Canada and the
U.S. uncovered significant numbers of people who thought they were Canadian,
but weren't. The old rules were "quite intricate," said Bill Janzen, an
immigration lobbyist in Ottawa for the Mennonite Central Committee of
Canada.

The new law offers citizenship to many individuals now in limbo. It also
stops the previous practice of granting citizenship in perpetuity to
children of Canadians born abroad, limiting eligibility to children of
parents born in Canada.

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