The Story of My Life so Far - Part 101 - Last hurdles before our move to British Columbia

This is the story of my life so far: 68 years and counting.
Prequel: A Brief History of my Family in France



The story starts here
Previous episode: Part 100


I had learned that in Canada, if you spent more than 183 days during the year as a legal resident, you needed to declare your worldwide revenue for income tax. So, I had decided to immigrate on July 2nd: I would be a legal resident for less than 183 days, and I would not need to declare in Canada my salary in France during the first half of 1994.

I had been told by the Consulate General of Canada in Paris (that is in the same building as the Canadian Embassy) that for me and my family to immigrate to British Columbia I needed to have a job proposal, letters from schools for my four children, letters from the two mothers authorizing their children to move to Canada and that Syrille and Gaëlle needed to have a French passport.

All the conditions were met, except for the passports of Syrille and Gaëlle.

I had started requesting French citizenship for them in 1993 and finally, at the beginning of June 1994, I was told that yes they were now French citizens. So, I had only one month to;

  • get French birth certificates for Syrille and Gaëlle,
  • with the birth certificates, get French passports,
  • with all the passports, get a working visa for me and student visas for my four children.

I knew the person to go to to get the visas at the Canadian Consulate. I had been to the Préfecture in Créteil and I had met a woman who assured me that as soon I had the birth certificates, they would issue the passports the same day.

In France, at this time, the birth certificates were issued by the municipality where you were born, if you were born in France, or by an establishment in Nantes, the Service central d'état civil.

I had sent all the necessary document to Nantes, and every day I was calling them to know if the birth certificates were ready to be issued. I was starting to panic during the last week of June, because we already had our airline tickets for July 2nd.

Finally, on June 28th I was told that the birth certificates were ready. So, I told them that I would go the next day to get them. And I took the train to Nantes on June 29th, went to the establishment, got the certificates and went back home the same day.

The next day, June 30th, I went to the Créteil Préfecture with my two kids and all the necessary documents and asked to see the woman that I had met previously. And I was told that she was already on vacation. I pleaded my case and they took pity on me: we waited for almost two hours, but we were given the passports. I was too late in the day to go to the Canadian Consulate, so I had to go the next day, that was the day before our departure to Canada.

What I had not realized was that July 1st was Canada Day, the national day of Canada, and of course a federal statutory holiday: nobody was working at the Canadian Consulate, so I could not get the visas!
As it was a Friday, the next working day was Monday July 4th. So I phoned the Airline, British Airways, and changed the tickets to Tuesday July 5th.

On the Monday, I finally got the visas at the Consulate and on Tuesday we were finally able to fly to Vancouver.

Continue to Part 102


If you like this story, please consider to follow me

Summary
Part 1 - Part 2 - Part 3 - Part 4 - Part 5 - Part 6 - Part 7 - Part 8
Part 9 - Part 10 - Part 11 - Part 12 - Part 13 - Part 14 - Part 15 - Part 16
Part 17 - Part 18 - Part 19 - Part 20 - Part 21 - Part 22 - Part 23 - Part 24
Part 25 - Part 26 - Part 27 - Part 28 - Part 29 - Part 30 - Part 31 - Part 32
Part 33 - Part 34 - Part 35 - Part 36 - Part 37 - Part 38 - Part 39 - Part 40
Part 41 - Part 42 - Part 43 - Part 44 - Part 45 - Part 46 - Part 47 - Part 48
Part 49 - Part 50 - Part 51 - Part 52 - Part 53 - Part 54 - Part 55 - Part 56
Part 57 - Part 58 - Part 59 - Part 60 - Part 61 - Part 62 - Part 63 - Part 64
Part 65 - Part 66 - Part 67 - Part 68 - Part 69 - Part 70 - Part 71 - Part 72
Part 73 - Part 74 - Part 75 - Part 76 - Part 77 - Part 78 - Part 79 - Part 80
Part 81 - Part 82 - Part 83 - Part 84 - Part 85 - Part 86 - Part 87 - Part 88
Part 89 - Part 90 - Part 91 - Part 92 - Part 93 - Part 94 - Part 95 - Part 96
Part 97 - Part 98 - Part 99 - Part 100



H2
H3
H4
3 columns
2 columns
1 column
8 Comments