Congratulazioni

To my husband! John is now an Italian citizen. He holds dual citizenship – USA & Italia. How did this come about? He married me..smart man.

Here is my disclaimer: This blog is detailed in regards to John’s journey to citizenship and for many, your eyes may roll back in your head out of sheer boredom. Sorry… bear with me. Either continue or wait for my next posting. 😉

As I am from Italian parents on both sides, I was able to follow a line back to my mother’s father and I was recognized as an Italian citizen in March 2017. It is called “jure sanguinis” or JS (by law of the bloodline), and in my case it took me about 2 1/2 years to be officially recognized. There are a number of agencies, sites and Facebook groups that help folks along with this process. My journey wasn’t complicated, as some, just nerve-wracking with all the paperwork. (And for those asking ‘why’ for wanting dual citizenship, here is a helpful link with some top reasons.

Once I was recognized, it was time for John to apply for his dual citizenship through marriage to me – jure matrimoni or JM. You can read about John’s application process while we lived in the USA here. It was a frustrating process, mostly because we had our timing off. We were a bit anxious and rushed the document collecting phase, not anticipating the expiration date on the background checks John had to collect.

John at Philadelphia Consulate August 2017. His online application was submitted July 2017

When we moved to Italy, John had just finished his interview at the Italian consulate in Philadelphia. Everything had been submitted online as well as to their office. Now John had to wait for Rome to get to their part of the process where his application is examined and stamped. Wait time we were told just about 2 years. Little did we know a huge bump in the road would greet us here in our home province of Chieti. I’ll get to that shortly.

Abruzzo, the region we live in, has four provinces: L’Aquila, Teramo, Pescara & Chieti. The first year we lived in Italy, we were located in the province of Teramo. I was required to contact the Prefettura (government headquarters), stating that we now both had residency in the Teramo province and give them John’s case number. This transferred the control of John’s application from Philadelphia to Teramo. So to complicate matters, we bought our house in Roccaspinalveti, Chieti province, only a few months after notifying Teramo. I had to contact the Prefettura in Chieti, give Teramo a heads-up and we crossed our fingers that everything would continue as planned with John’s application.

Well, not…. here’s the bump… The Prefect did not understand or believe that I was a citizen from birth. He saw my recognition date of March 2017, and logged that as my official start date of citizenship. Not so for JS, as I mentioned earlier. Having that misinformation, he said John had not been married to a citizen (me) for at least two years (as required) as a resident here in Italy. I scrambled for help as per the Prefettura’s letter, I only had about 2 weeks to make my case. I contacted a lawyer here in Rocca, tapped into online help on a closed citizenship FB page, and Italian owned – US based citizenship business, ItalyMONDO. Oh I also tracked down some help from the Italian Consulate in Philadelphia. Letters were written and expedited, laws quoted, documents acquired. It shook out just in time of the deadline with two actions in our favor:

  • A letter from our attorney here in Roccaspinalveti, stating law: The law n.91 of 5 February 1992 which regulates the matter of citizenship in Italy provides that the acquisition of citizenship occurs automatically BY BIRTH (IUS SANGUINIS)
  • Attestation from Philadelphia via San Salvo – copy of CONS01 by e-mail and a copy of the statement (attestation) that Philadelphia has sent to my ancestral comune (San Salvo) when I was recognized. (Thank you Peter Farina of ItalyMONDO for pointing towards this essential piece of information!)

Providing these documents cleared up the issue and I received a call early March from the Prefettura stating they had what they needed to proceed with John’s application. Whew…. a huge weight off our shoulders.

You may ask what would be the downside to the application being rejected. Well, he would have to start a new application online (substantial fee), collect all his background checks from the US (more money spent and time), meet with the Prefettura, and wait at least 4 years for his citizenship. OH AND! Before all this could happen, he’d have to take an Italian Language test at a level B1 (Intermediate..and word out there it’s very difficult). Our thoughts were just forget about reapplying and he would renew his 5 year Carta di Soggiorno (Visa) when due. Not the solution his heart desired, but a livable one.

About three months to the day from the Prefettura’s call, I received another call from them. My stomach dropped when I saw their number come up on caller ID. What did they want now or what has gone wrong? Absolutely nothing! John was a citizen! We needed to come to Chieti for the taking of the oath ceremony. I was a bit confused, as I listen to the secretary firing away on the phone in Italian, as I thought our mayor would do the ceremony here in our comune. But from what I understood from that call we both had to go to Chieti. Slight misunderstanding…yes, we had to pick up John’s official documents to sign in their presence, but no ceremony. That will take place here in Roccaspinalveti at the comune office. (I’m still slow to understand fast Italian on the phone. I need to see faces and body expressions. lol)

Next stop was the Anagrafe office at our comune. The clerk organized the paperwork, got John to sign a few documents and set John’s oath ceremony for the following Saturday. That brings me to today, Saturday. Not sure why I was nervous… I think it was such a long road between both us working on this for a cumulative 4 1/2 years. And most importantly, just a grand event in our lives. Our mayor read her part of the ceremony, John read his oath, some signatures, pictures and a short celebration at the local bar with everyone. Perfectly Italian…

Was it worth all the work? All the frustrations over the past few years? Absolutely… I leave you with a few pics of the ceremony and a video with John valiantly reading his oath and church bells ringing.. (not necessarily for us, as it was noon, but sure topped off the event!)

The Transformation

My dear husband mentioned just the other day how he never seems to be without a project. I wince a bit as we didn’t move to Italy to work nonstop on projects. It’s tough when you’re multi-talented. It sounds boastful, but it’s actually true. John is highly skilled in a number of job categories when building or renovating; electrician, plumber, bricklayer, tile layer, just to name a few.

This house isn’t a large project, it just needed some updating. We actually put the main living space on hold as we’re getting the lower apartment ready for guests. From past experience, I knew I had to set some kind of schedule with goals. With that said, I also knew we’d never keep them. Life just has a way of changing what we plan. But we’re adapting and trying to be flexible. Ha, like that’s possible for two seriously OCD folks! We’ve been working since March, on and off (had a vacation thrown in there) and it’s ready! It is now listed on Airbnb, as John madly finished renovating the bathroom today!

Tile tip from John

Save your old masonry drill bits. They come in handy when you’re drilling holes into tiles. Take the old bit in your hand, using a bit that is the same size as the hole to be drilled. Holding the tip slightly away from the surface of the tile, gently tap with hammer on spot to be drilled, just enough to make a mark in the glaze. Then when you drill the hole with the new bit, it will not chip or jump off the mark.

To add some personal touches, John did a lot of finishing of older furniture pieces, and I had fun with bright paint colors. Linens for bathroom and bedrooms came either from IKEA or a hotel website that specializes in everything one could need for a hotel, B&B or agriturismo. I kid John that he is ” the back of the house” and I’m “the front. ”

Oh and during all this crazy work, we actually slipped in our first cooking experience in the middle of our renovation. Big huge thanks to Rina & Angelica of Trattoria La Fonte, here in Serre. Our friend, Alex, and her niece and boyfriend, were our test subjects. Wonderful time, good food to eat and great ideas for the next time. ( You can read about these experiences on our Casa Serre site – https://casaserre.com/what-to-do/workshops-tours/ )

We realize we are a bit late to receive bookings for this season, as most folks have already solidified their travel plans. There is the satisfaction of a job well done and the apartment will keep just fine as we wait for family, friends and guests to arrive in the near future.

I wanted to show you some before and after interior shots. The before shots are from a realty site and are most likely a few years old. This house had been on the market a few years before we purchased it. And as you will see, a wide angle lens was used, as normally the case for listing. I’ll share exterior shots in a future posting. Still working away on those. 😉

Master Bedroom
Kitchen
Den with daybed
Lounge area – double futon
Bathroom

So apart from some wall design applications, we’re pretty much done on the inside. This has all transpired through cold rainy spring and now a unbearable heat wave. The heat wave should be breaking soon and we’ll tackle the outside upgrades to the parking area and patio.

On the non-project side of life, we have some exciting news that relates to life here in Italy. I’m going to share some pics and the experience in my next blog.

Until then, I’ll leave you with some views…I will never get enough…

Montazzoli & Maiella
Predawn walk