Hi everyone 😊
I recently heard about the Ley Memoria granting Spanish citizenship to grandchildren of Spanish exiles and I’ve been having difficulty obtaining the necessary documents to prove my grandfather left Spain or arrived in Cuba during the specified time period.
I hope you guys can help and share your experiences with me.
Here’s my situation:
My grandfather was born in Asturias, Spain and fought on the Republics side
during the Spanish Civil war. He left Spain immediately after Franco won the
war and migrated to Cuba. There, he later met my grandmother and they
married in 1957. My mother was born in 1958 in Cuba. I have my mother’s
Cuban birth certificate in my possession but I discovered that it needs the
MINREX stamp. Is there any way to get a Hague apostille from the US instead? I went to Cuba City Hall and it costs $500 to get the stamp from Cuba.
Also, my grandfather was not a big part of my mother’s life as he and my
grandmother soon divorced so we have very limited information about him (still trying to find his birthdate!). We
believe that he became a Cuban citizen before he met my grandmother so he would most likely
have a certificate of naturalization in Cuba. However, when I contacted Cuba
City Hall, Rob told me that acquiring those certificates takes 12-18
months and they don’t do it anymore. He said I could ask for a waiver (not
sure how to do this). Has anyone used a waiver before?
I’m getting pretty anxious because I only recently discovered the Ley
Memoria and I have until December 27th to submit the application. I’m
worried I won’t have the documents proving that my grandfather was an exile
in time. Do you know if Spain keeps records of exiles
that left after the Civil War ended? Since I can’t get the naturalization
certificate in time, I don’t know how else to prove he was an exile.
We also have my grandmother’s divorce papers laying around somewhere (I
believe they are from Cuba, but not too sure as we are still looking for
them). I don’t know if this would help as not sure if it shows that he was
from Spain or what date he arrived in Cuba.
One more question: I was looking at the Spanish ministry of justice site and there’s an online form that you can fill out
in order to obtain a Spanish birth certificate. I will be doing this but it’s asking me for my road name, number (km) etc as though
they want a Spanish address. I live in Miami though. Can I still use the online form? Do they deliver certificates to US addresses? Does anyone know how long it takes to receive the certificate?
My mother said that while she was in college in Miami, the school asked for his personal information and social security. Do you think the school would still have those records even though they are about 30 years old?
This is what I know about him - his full name, birth place, mother’s name, father’s name, approximate time frame he left Spain/arrived in Cuba, he fought on the republics side during the war and left afterward (and some other minor details.)
Any information you can provide on what I should do would be extremely helpful. I apologize for
asking so many questions, I’m just very anxious and I want to have
everything I need before the deadline. I’m not familiar with the process. Do you guys think I have a chance to
get my citizenship?
I look forward to hearing from you all. Thank you again and I really hope you
can share your experiences with me.
Sincerely,
Amanda