muzyka:
Is Polish citezenship equivalent to having a Polish (or EU) passport? I'm confused about the advice.......
Yes it is. See below.
valmoe1:
You must prove citizenship before you can get a passport. To prove citizenship you must get your residency.
Your bf's mother is still polish even after her passport expires. If your US passport expires, do you lose your american citizenship?? She only needs to go the embassy with the expired passport and some ID in order to get a new one.
People, it is very simple:
You are Polish if your parents are Polish. If you were born in poland or outside of poland to Polish parents, you automatically qualify for a polish passport because you ARE POLISH. The Polish government considers such people as Polish citizens. Just bring proof of your parents' Polish citizenship and basically all possible ID documentation you and your parents have (you never know they'll want - polish bureaucracy is nuts) to a polish embassy/consulate and within 6 months you will get your passport. Actually, you may even qualify for a polish passort if only one of your grandaparents is/was polish, but i'm not 100% sure about this last part. However, if your parents renounced their polish citizenship then you're out of luck.
I (born in PL) had no problems getting my Polish passport nor did my canadian born siblings.
As for work, you'll need the Polish equivalent to a SIN # (sorry i forget what it's called) which i believe comes with your "dowod osobisty"...
Matt1:
I was charching some 20 $ / hour for Math so you can double for German now
I think.
What?? Learning German as a second language is no longer popular in poland. My aunt is a german teacher and every year she finds it more and more difficult to find students looking for german lessons. English is number 1, followed by Russian.