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Birth Certificate for K1 visa interview

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Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: India
Timeline

Hello everyone :)

I have my birth certificate in my native language, hindi and it does not have my name as when i was born it was not necessary to give the name of the child..it was decided later by the family (I think that still the case!). I have secondary evidence of my class 10 certificate with my date of birth and fathers name but not mothers. Any idea if i can use the school certificate and a letter from my mother as an affidavit? I have also translated my original. I had submitted these at CSC and got no RFE. Will these work for the interview in Delhi? HELP!!!

thanks

dano

Our Journey.....

AOS & EAD

July 24, 2007: Mailed AOS & EAD to Chicago

July 26, 2007:Package delivered at PO Box in Chicago

Sept 1, 2007: NOA1 for AOS

Sept 6, 2007: NOA1 for EAD

Sept 7, 2007: RFE for AOS

Sept 18, 2007:RFE received by USCIS

Sept 22, 2007: Biometrics for AOS & EAD

Oct 19, 2007: EAD card in hand!

Dec 4 , 2007: Greencard Approved...I-155 stamped on Passport :) at the Interview

Dec 17: Greencard in Mail :)

Removing of Conditions

Sept. 21, 2009: Mailed out I-751

Sept. 23, 2009: Received at CSC

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Oct 21, 2009: Touch

Nov 13, 2009: Email: Card production ordered

NOv. 20, 2009: GC in Mail :)

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You should be fine, specially you already went through most of the process without RFE. The consulate officers are familiar with the indian custom, culture so i am sure it's not the 1st time it has happened, or some folks don't have it at all. Good luck at the interview. we used the baptism certificate for all our process.

Edited by Nikita2Charles

Gone but not Forgotten!

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: India
Timeline

Hello! Below I will paste the requirements for the birth certificate, as shown on the Delhi website. Basically it says that if your birth certificate is missing any info, you have to submit “secondary evidence” but that has to have both parents’ names on it. Since your 10th class certificate doesn’t have that, you should get a notarized affidavit (see details below) with all details including your parents names. That’s what we did! :thumbs:

Quote from Delhi website: http://newdelhi.usembassy.gov/k_visas.html

BIRTH CERTIFICATE: Original and photocopy. Each applicant must submit an original and a clear photocopy of his/her birth certificate. The certificate should include the applicant's name, date and place of birth, the names of both parents, and the seal of the issuing office; i.e., the municipal authorities. If your name is not mentioned in the birth certificate and if any details are missing in the birth certificate or if there is a discrepancy regarding your date of birth or name, submit the certificate along with secondary evidence.

Secondary evidence can be a baptismal certificate, an adoption decree, a school record, a notarized affidavit from a close relative (a parent, a close relative, a neighbor or friend who was present at the time of your birth) on the appropriate stamp paper, which must be sworn before a First Class Magistrate. The person making this affidavit must state how he/she knows your family and how he/she knows the facts of your birth. Secondary evidence must have your name, date and place of birth; names of both parents; and the seal of the issuing office. If your birth was not recorded, please submit a "no record of birth registration" letter from the relevant municipality along with secondary evidence and if your birth record has been destroyed or the municipality authorities will not issue one, submit a letter from the municipality stating so along with secondary evidence. Secondary evidence may be a baptismal certificate, an adoption decree, a school record, a notarized affidavit from a close relative (a parent, a close relative, a neighbor or friend who was present at the time of your birth) on the appropriate stamp paper, which must be sworn before a First Class Magistrate. The person making this affidavit must state how he/she knows your family and how he/she knows the facts of your birth. Secondary evidence must have your name, date and place of birth; names of both parents; and the seal of the issuing office.

Note: If any of these documents were issued in a regional language, a notarized English translation is required in addition to the original.

***Nagaraju & Eileen***
K1 (Fiance Visa)
Oct 18, 2006: NOA1
Feb 8, 2007: NOA2
April 13, 2007: INTERVIEW in Chennai -Approved
May 25, 2007: USA Arrival! EAD at JFK
June 15, 2007: Married
AOS (Adjustment of Status)
June 21, 2007: AOS/EAD Submitted
Sept 18, 2007: AOS Interview - APPROVED!!
ROC (Removing of Conditions)
June 23, 2009: Sent in I-751 packet
Sept 11, 2009: APPROVED!!
Sept 18, 2009: Received 10-year Green Card!

Naturalization
July 15, 2010: Sent N-400 packet
July 23, 2010: NOA Notice date
Oct 15, 2010: Citizenship Interview - Passed!
Nov 15, 2010: Oath Ceremony in Fresno, CA
Nov 24, 2010: Did SSN and Applied for Passport
Dec 6, 2010: Passport Arrives
Dec 7, 2010: Sent for Indian Passport Surrender Certificate
Dec 27, 2010: Surrender Certificate Arrives
Jan 3, 2011: Sent for Overseas Citizenship of India Card
March 1, 2011: Received OCI card!

Divorce

Feb 2015:​ Found out he was cheating (prostitutes / escorts)

​May 2015: Divorce Final

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Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: India
Timeline
ur passport last page has ur parents names in it...so i guess.it shd be fine....it vl hav ur mom's name in it....

al the best..

pinky

thanks pinky..it was relief to read your reply :) One task less ;)

Our Journey.....

AOS & EAD

July 24, 2007: Mailed AOS & EAD to Chicago

July 26, 2007:Package delivered at PO Box in Chicago

Sept 1, 2007: NOA1 for AOS

Sept 6, 2007: NOA1 for EAD

Sept 7, 2007: RFE for AOS

Sept 18, 2007:RFE received by USCIS

Sept 22, 2007: Biometrics for AOS & EAD

Oct 19, 2007: EAD card in hand!

Dec 4 , 2007: Greencard Approved...I-155 stamped on Passport :) at the Interview

Dec 17: Greencard in Mail :)

Removing of Conditions

Sept. 21, 2009: Mailed out I-751

Sept. 23, 2009: Received at CSC

Sept 28, 2009: Received NOA1

Oct 20, 2009: Biometrics Appt.

Oct 21, 2009: Touch

Nov 13, 2009: Email: Card production ordered

NOv. 20, 2009: GC in Mail :)

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: India
Timeline
ur passport last page has ur parents names in it...so i guess.it shd be fine....it vl hav ur mom's name in it....

al the best..pinky

thanks pinky..it was relief to read your reply :) One task less ;)

Sorry to burst your bubble but… on the instructions there are very exact rules stating that a passport AND a birth certificate are absolutely necessary. If a passport were accepted in place of the birth certificate, that would have been stated in the instructions. But it says directly that you need a birth certificate with all details OR a letter from municipal authorities AND a second piece of evidence, like a document showing parents name etc, or a signed avadavat.

***Nagaraju & Eileen***
K1 (Fiance Visa)
Oct 18, 2006: NOA1
Feb 8, 2007: NOA2
April 13, 2007: INTERVIEW in Chennai -Approved
May 25, 2007: USA Arrival! EAD at JFK
June 15, 2007: Married
AOS (Adjustment of Status)
June 21, 2007: AOS/EAD Submitted
Sept 18, 2007: AOS Interview - APPROVED!!
ROC (Removing of Conditions)
June 23, 2009: Sent in I-751 packet
Sept 11, 2009: APPROVED!!
Sept 18, 2009: Received 10-year Green Card!

Naturalization
July 15, 2010: Sent N-400 packet
July 23, 2010: NOA Notice date
Oct 15, 2010: Citizenship Interview - Passed!
Nov 15, 2010: Oath Ceremony in Fresno, CA
Nov 24, 2010: Did SSN and Applied for Passport
Dec 6, 2010: Passport Arrives
Dec 7, 2010: Sent for Indian Passport Surrender Certificate
Dec 27, 2010: Surrender Certificate Arrives
Jan 3, 2011: Sent for Overseas Citizenship of India Card
March 1, 2011: Received OCI card!

Divorce

Feb 2015:​ Found out he was cheating (prostitutes / escorts)

​May 2015: Divorce Final

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