Very informative. I have one question, though. If you come from a country where dual nationality is not recognised, does that mean you'll still have to renounce your nationality to take the German nationality?
Nice one as usual bro bro....just keep your natural cadence and way of speaking. This vid was a mix of you + some stilted elocution that's not you. Keep it natural. ❤
I have a question which is if I come to Germany for studying and lets say one year I'm gonna learn German language and the next 2years I'll start a university. Then when I compelete the degree, I have to change the student visa to work visa to apply the permanent residency. If I have German profiency or working as volunteer, do I get the German passport after applying the permanent residency or I have to wait three years after I get the permanent residency to get the German passport, or the 3 years they said is the three years I spent in studying since they've said the student period will be counted? Please give me an answer. Thank you.
I think all the years you spend here count because it’s still some type of residency. I’m not completely sure about all the fine print but even in my case all the years I spent even with the visa are considered.
@@OshandoJohnson Thank you so much, that means if I spent 3years in a university with student visa, then changed to a work visa to apply the permanent residency, after I get the permanent residency and I met certain criteria I can apply the German citizenship aka German passport after one or two months of getting permanent residency if I reside some states that count fully the student years like Bavaria state as I heard?!
@@TheFundedMan I think what you described should be possible but I haven’t read all the fine prints of the new law so I can’t say if it’s guaranteed. However my years as a student were counted so I assume it will be the same with the new law.
Love your content
Hi Orlando! Jamaican here in Spain. I’m hoping that Spain follows suit with that law soon.
They getting Conscription prospects ready in case of War.
Haha I think they have other intentions. 😂
Where do you live there?
Very informative. I have one question, though. If you come from a country where dual nationality is not recognised, does that mean you'll still have to renounce your nationality to take the German nationality?
Yes I think that’s required if one country doesn’t allow dual citizenship. Otherwise you might be possibly committing a punishable offense.
Nice one as usual bro bro....just keep your natural cadence and way of speaking. This vid was a mix of you + some stilted elocution that's not you. Keep it natural. ❤
Thanks. 😊 What do you mean by stilted elocution though?
Have you applied for German citizenship yet? You do realize that now you can hold both German and Jamaican citizenship?
Not yet. They have a big backlog of applications so they aren’t accepting new applications where I live.
Hi Johnson I am looking job in Germany however German language is barriers could you please help me with this.
Maybe you can search for jobs in the bigger and more international companies. They tend to not have very high requirements for the language.
I have a question which is if I come to Germany for studying and lets say one year I'm gonna learn German language and the next 2years I'll start a university. Then when I compelete the degree, I have to change the student visa to work visa to apply the permanent residency. If I have German profiency or working as volunteer, do I get the German passport after applying the permanent residency or I have to wait three years after I get the permanent residency to get the German passport, or the 3 years they said is the three years I spent in studying since they've said the student period will be counted?
Please give me an answer.
Thank you.
I think all the years you spend here count because it’s still some type of residency. I’m not completely sure about all the fine print but even in my case all the years I spent even with the visa are considered.
@@OshandoJohnson Thank you so much, that means if I spent 3years in a university with student visa, then changed to a work visa to apply the permanent residency, after I get the permanent residency and I met certain criteria I can apply the German citizenship aka German passport after one or two months of getting permanent residency if I reside some states that count fully the student years like Bavaria state as I heard?!
@@TheFundedMan I think what you described should be possible but I haven’t read all the fine prints of the new law so I can’t say if it’s guaranteed. However my years as a student were counted so I assume it will be the same with the new law.
@@OshandoJohnson Thank you so much.
now it is time to go to Germany, man 😅😅😅😅. not all countries make a law like that. Germany
Actually quite a few countries do. Germany is joining on. It’s their effort to “modernize” their citizenship laws as they say.