Hello Dan
I am wondering if I qualify for the Austrian route as I was born in Bucharest 
(so not the Austria Hungarian Empire) in 1945. But my mother and grandmother 
were both born in the Austro Hungarian Empire, which became Romanian in 1918 or 
so. My family did not escape till 1949, including mother and grandmother, many 
others perished. I have written to the Austrian Embassy here in the (very 
limited) hope they will give me some information based on my history, just in 
case they turn out to be one of the helpful Embassies.

Romanian citizenship seems to be the easiest route but from what I have heard 
also the slowest with thousands of applications which take an inordinate amount 
of  time for them to process (even if they want to).

On another matter: there were many Schachters in Bukovina. My great grandmother 
was a Schachter too.  Not necessarily a relation of yours. One my distant 
cousins was a Hermann Schachter and his daughter, Alicia, was (is, maybe) a 
concert pianist living in the US. Any connection?

All the best to all
Karin


From: Alan Gavurin <[email protected]>
Sent: 27 January 2021 11:44
To: Dan Raynes <[email protected]>
Cc: Rennert Gad <[email protected]>; Karin Perrin <[email protected]>; 
Arthur von Czernowitz <[email protected]>; [email protected]; 
[email protected]
Subject: Re: [czernowitz-l] Applying for Romanian Citizenship - Legal Support

Thank you Dan and thank you everyone who has responded and is responding. It 
certainly seems that lots of people are interested in this issue

What is so strange is the variety of responses, particularly with reference to 
the Austrian option. Some seem to have had help and encouragement from Austrian 
Consulates and others seem to have been stuck in very lengthy processes. Some 
seem to have "open and shut" cases that should qualify for citizenship but are 
still receiving problems. Others have been "approached" by the Austrian 
authorities to take up citizenship. It seems like Austria is (very belatedly) 
trying to improve what it is now doing to address the debt they have to so many 
of its former Jewish citizens but also that the process is not running in a 
uniformly, smooth fashion.

My grandparents were born in the Austro-Hungarian territories of Galicia and 
Bukovina before WW1 and travelled to Germany in 1930. They escaped the Nazis 
and went to England in 1939. The Austrian rules address their former citizens 
from what is now Ukraine and Romania but state that they had to escape National 
Socialist persecution in "the Austrian Republic" before WW2. My understanding 
of the term "Austrian Republic" is that it is the geographical territory formed 
in 1918/19 and roughly the same as the current borders of modern day Austria. 
However, in March 1938 Austria was annexed by Germany in the Anschluss so 
Austria and Germany were one country from 1938 to 1945. My grandparents and my 
mother left Germany (Stuttgart) in 1939 so was that technically the same as 
Austria as the two countries were in fact one unified country?

This may seem like legal nit-picking but it could make the difference to 
whether or not we qualify under these new Austrian rules

I am not expecting anyone to have the answer to this but I would be interested 
to hear if any of you have any opinions on this

Many thanks

Alan

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On Wed, 27 Jan 2021 at 03:18, Dan Raynes 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
All,

I have been investigating this for the last few months and I can share what I 
have learned about European citizenship by descent, at least for my background. 
  I am a US Citizen but very interested in getting my Romanian citizenship.   
My grandmother is from Raddutz, in Buckovina.   She was born there in 1898 and 
left for the USA in 1920.    My grandfather (her husband) came from Russia and 
I have no interest in that citizenship even if was available.   From the other 
side my great grandparents came from Poland (eventually Lithuania).    I did 
not meet the Poland criteria for citizenship by descent.    There were three 
routes I could go with my grandmother, Romanian, Hungarian and Austrian.  As 
you may know Buckovina, Romania during WW1 and afterwards overlaps with these 
three countries.    I got mixed messages on all these for a long time and went 
back and forth.   I can share what I have learned:

Austria:   Unless you can prove that your family left National Socialism after 
1933, though you will have better luck if it is after 1938 than this route is 
out.   It took a number of calls to my local Austrian consulate to get the 
answer.   I will say this though they were phenomenally eager to help and if 
there was a way they would.   I was very impressed with the Los Angeles 
consulate

Hungary: I am not much of a fan of their government right wing and anti 
immigrant.   I do theoretically meet their requirement from background.   
However they now require you to be fluent in reading, writing and speaking 
Hungarian.    I can respect that after all I would want the same for someone 
wanting to be a citizen of my country.  With their anti immigrant stance though 
what if you spent a lot of time learning their language and they felt for 
whatever arbitrary reason you still don't make it.

Romania:  I have gotten so many mixed messages on this.   The first Romanian 
law firm told me that since my grandmother was born in Austria-Hungary and did 
not officially become a Romanian citizen after the Great War before she left 
for the US than she was in effect stateless so I do not qualify.
I am now talking to a new Romanian law firm that says I do qualify based on the 
documentation I shared with them and the call my brother and I had with them.   
We did an initial consulting call that had a fee to it.   We are doing research 
before we decide to go further.   We have two major hangups.   My grandmother's 
maiden name in Romania was Schachter.   When she came to the US for whatever 
reason (perhaps US Immigration changed it?) all her documentation in the US now 
has Schecter.   She was born in July 1898.   Yet the US did not ask for 
documentation when you came back than and perhaps she wanted to be younger for 
marital reasons she changed the year and date in July 1900.    So we have to 
build a case to prove that she is one in the same and it may go to litigation.

Has anyone on here had a similar situation with a grandparent from a former 
territory of Austria - Hungary that became Romania and they left in the 
intervening war years?

Thanks
Dan

On Tue, Jan 26, 2021 at 5:36 AM Rennert Gad 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
With the new law, now in effect in Austria regarding Jews after WWII, I applied 
through the Austrian embassy in Israel and received a response that they do not 
think I am eligible. This is not clear to me as my father was born in 
Austro-Hungary in 1918 before they became “Romania” and his and my mother’s 
birth registration is in written in German (the spoken language at home which 
now I understand is more Austrian German than German German). Needless to 
mention that both of my parents ended spending long periods in camps in 
Transnistria.

And BTW, they did not have a problem with me having former nationalities

Gadi

From: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
 On Behalf Of Karin Perrin
Sent: Tuesday, January 26, 2021 2:28 PM
To: Alan Gavurin <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: Arthur von Czernowitz 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: RE: [czernowitz-l] Applying for Romanian Citizenship - Legal Support

Sounds very encouraging.
Have read the link and might be a possibility. I will get in touch. You have 
been most helpful, Alan.
Kind regards
Karin

From: Alan Gavurin <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: 26 January 2021 12:24
To: Karin Perrin <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: Arthur von Czernowitz 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [czernowitz-l] Applying for Romanian Citizenship - Legal Support

Hi Karin

Happy to have helped to stimulate this point (along with Arthur, Bertie and 
others)

re the dual nationality point see below from the Austrian Embassy in London 
website - I think dual nationality is fine if you qualify using this route 
(which is another question)

Alan

Citizenship for descendants of victims of National Socialism – Österreichische 
Botschaft London 
(bmeia.gv.at)<https://eur01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.bmeia.gv.at%2Fen%2Faustrian-embassy-london%2Fservice-for-citizens%2Fcitizenship-for-descendants-of-victims-of-national-socialism%2F&data=04%7C01%7Crennert%40technion.ac.il%7C48af05e741e240ec65d908d8c1f814f9%7Cf1502c4cee2e411c9715c855f6753b84%7C1%7C0%7C637472618547801920%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000&sdata=8YIxqsFfg7U1FpDBxOmoT9gMaJZFR%2FzviDixvKrACKs%3D&reserved=0>


According to the new § 58c para. 1a of the Austrian Citizenship Act descendants 
of victims of the National Socialist regime can acquire Austrian citizenship by 
means of a declaration (“Anzeige”), without having to give up their current 
citizenship or nationality in return.

Please note, however, that the law in some countries provides for the automatic 
loss of its citizenship or nationality if you acquire another citizenship. In 
case of doubt, please check with the competent authority of your home country.

On Tue, 26 Jan 2021 at 12:18, Karin Perrin 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi Alan
A conundrum.
You are encouraging me to investigate the route of Austrian citizenship. The 
Romanian route is stagnating. Various excuses…
I never thought that joining the Czernowitz group would lead to such 
interesting conversations… 😊

Karin

From: Alan Gavurin <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: 26 January 2021 11:36
To: Karin Perrin <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: Arthur von Czernowitz 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [czernowitz-l] Applying for Romanian Citizenship - Legal Support

Thank you Karin & Arthur for raising the Austrian Citizenship question

Firstly, Karin it seems that you must have a chance to apply again to Austria 
having already once held citizenship.  I think there is a significant element 
of restitution and nations trying to confront errors of the past in some of 
these recent changes to citizenship rules - also see Portugal and, to a lesser 
extent, Spain.

The issue of dual nationality is clearly important, especially to those of us 
in the UK who are looking to re-create our links to Europe after the terrible 
disaster of Brexit. I believe Romania does, Poland is not keen but may do so 
and Germany has now changed its rules to not allow it with non EU countries 
(like the UK post 2020) although if you are applying for German citizenship 
because it was lost as a result of Nazi oppression then you CAN apparently hold 
dual citizenship.

I have struggled with understanding the Austrian offer. I will try and look 
into it in more detail but it could be interesting. Does it matter that, after 
leaving Kolomya & Vijnita, my grandparents went to Germany and never lived in 
what is modern-day Austria?

My grandparents on my mother's side came from Kolomyja and Vijnita (Wiznitz) - 
the two towns are 50km apart but when they were born in 1908/1911 one was in 
the Austro-Hungarian province of Galicia and one was in the A-H province of 
Bukovina. Now both are in Ukraine (via USSR). In between WW1 & WW2 Vijnita was 
in Romania.

So we have been looking at Romanian citizenship (as I said previously) and also 
German citizenship as my mother was born there in 1938 but as my grandparents 
never became German citizens this is proving difficult.

So what is it to be?

[cid:[email protected]][cid:[email protected]][cid:[email protected]]
Happy to discuss this further with anyone who knows more about the Austrian 
option or wants to compare notes

Alan

On Tue, 26 Jan 2021 at 11:09, Karin Perrin 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Dear all
Just musing on the Austrian passport options….

Many many years ago, after living in the UK for many years, I became a UK 
citizen. At the time the Austrians (not members of the EU till 1995) asked me 
to sign a document giving up my Austrian citizenship “for ever” . (I had had 
Austrian citizenship since I was a child – I am not sure on what basis my 
father was able to get this after the war when the whole family was stateless 
after escaping Romania). The Austrian government, at the time I became a UK 
national (1980s), would not accept dual nationality. The UK had no problem with 
dual nationalities and I believe still does not.  Just mentioning this in case 
it affects the route to Austrian citizenship – do they still refuse dual 
citizenship even if part of the EU now? On my mother’s side of the family we 
are indeed old “Austro Hungarians” so in principle Arthur’s idea might be a 
route I also could take, in search of a EU passport. But I personally might be 
blocked due to my “unpatriotic actions”!

Regards to all.
Karin


From: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 On Behalf Of Arthur von Czernowitz
Sent: 25 January 2021 13:55
To: Alan Gavurin <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; Gold-Glasberg, 
Ruth <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: Re: [czernowitz-l] Applying for Romanian Citizenship - Legal Support


Hello Alan

I believe that you and your brother are after an European passport.

I thing that there is another way, you can also try in obtaining an Austrian 
passport if you can prove that your grandfather had Austrian citizenship.



Do you speak Hebrew? If yes I could possibly help you with the Romanian route.



Arthur

Sent from my iPad

On Jan 25, 2021, at 3:21 AM, Alan Gavurin 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Friends

Forgive me if this has been discussed before but my brother and I are 
considering applEying for Romanian citizenship because our late grandfather was 
born in Wiznitz/Vijnita/Vyzhnytsia in 1911

Have any of you gone down this path? I know of at least one other Czernowitzer 
who is.

Can any of you recommend a good Romanian lawyer who could help us.

I have already approached two Romanian lawyers - one says he does not take 
cases where the relatives come from outside current Romanian borders (ie 
present day Ukraine) and the other does not speak English so we are really 
struggling to understand the technicalities and I don't think Google Translate 
is helping very much

Any recommendations would be gratefully received

Alan


--
Alan Gavurin
London
UK




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(t) 020 8882 1423

(m) 07973 424357



--
Alan Gavurin
45 Orpington Road
Winchmore Hill
London
N21 3PL
(t) 020 8882 1423

(m) 07973 424357

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Alan Gavurin
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N21 3PL
(t) 020 8882 1423

(m) 07973 424357


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