Minnesota family stranded in Brazil with prematurely born baby set for joyous homecoming next week (2024)

Greyson Leo Phillips turned 3 months old last week and celebrated by doing all of his favorite things: eating, sleeping, groaning and wiggling.

Minnesota family stranded in Brazil with prematurely born baby set for joyous homecoming next week (1)

Greyson, who was born three months prematurely in Brazil, will get to mark his 4-month birthday in Minnesota now that all of his U.S. and Brazilian documents have been or will be secured, his parents, Chris and Cheri Phillips, said.

Greyson’s national identity card – the last piece of Brazilian paperwork the baby’s parents secured, just in case it is requested – will be ready on Thursday. His U.S. passport was delivered last week, 12 weeks to the day after he was born on March 12, 2024.

Greyson, who was 2 pounds, 12.6 ounces at birth, spent the first 51 days of his life in the neonatal intensive care unit of Ilha Hospital e Maternidade in Florianópolis.

The Phillipses, U.S. citizens who had not planned to have a child born in Brazil, have spent the past four months getting Greyson’s documentation squared away.

Among the issues: Brazilian officials wouldn’t issue Greyson a birth certificate because the Phillipses’ passports, like all U.S. passports, don’t list their parents’ names. Without a birth certificate, U.S. officials in Brazil wouldn’t issue him an American passport. Without a passport, his parents couldn’t take him home to Minnesota.

The Phillipses reached out to media in Minnesota and Brazil and conducted a dozen interviews before Brazilian officials agreed to help.

Greyson, who now weighs a whopping 7½ pounds, now has his birth certificate, his Brazilian passport, and his Cadastro de Pessoas Físicas, or “Registry of Individuals,” which is like a Brazilian Social Security number, Chris Phillips said.

Greyson Leo Phillips turned three months old on June 12, 2024 in Florianópolis, Brazil. (Courtesy of Chris Phillips)Chris and Cheri Phillips also were able to secure Greyson’s U.S. passport, but until just a few weeks ago were concerned there might be an issue at immigration in São Paulo when they leave Brazil on Monday.

“Why? Because that (U.S.) passport has no entry stamp/visa, seeing as how he never passed through immigration to enter Brazil. (They don’t issue visas to fetuses, apparently.)” Phillips wrote in an update to friends and family. “Even with a birth certificate and umpteen online articles and videos explaining our story, one never knows which immigration officer you’ll get or what their mood will be on a particular day. So, we wanted to make sure we have his Brazilian passport to lessen the odds of anything going wrong when we do leave Brazil.”

When the couple got word that Greyson’s Brazilian passport was ready – a full four days earlier than anticipated – Chris Phillips said he raced over to the passport office to pick it up.

“After informing the federal employee on the other side of the glass why I was there, I handed over his birth certificate and my U.S. passport,” he wrote. “She checked her computer then turned around to pull out a row of Brazilian passports from the wall behind her. Stoic and business-like as one would expect from any government employee, she opened his passport to verify the information. Then, upon seeing his picture with his chubby cheeks and wide-open blue eyes staring into the camera, broke into a huge smile and emitted an audible, ‘awwww.’ … Unbelievable. After so much stress and strife over the preceding 12+ weeks as to how and when we’d ever get this kid’s documentation in order so we could take him home to Minnesota, we obtained both his U.S. and Brazilian passports within 48 hours of each other.”

The couple plan to fly to Sao Paulo on Sunday and then fly to Atlanta the next day. They plan to arrive at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport at 1:55 p.m. on Tuesday.

After four months away, the couple is looking forward to speaking English “and not having to translate everything, everywhere, all the time,” he said.

They also will be moving into their new house in Cambridge – a house they closed on while in Brazil. Family and friends moved all of their belongings for them.

They will miss Melory, Chris Phillips’ 8-year-old daughter, who lives with her mother in Florianópolis, on an island off the country’s southeast coast, but are grateful she has had so much time to bond with her half-brother — an opportunity she otherwise would not have had if he’d been born in Minnesota in June as planned.

“She asked me the other night, ‘Quando será a próxima vez que eu vejo o fofinho?’ (‘When will I see the little cutie again?’)” he said.

They are hoping that Melory will be able to come to Minnesota sometime later this year. They also want to return to Florianópolis in February for her 9th birthday, Chris Phillips said.

“We are not planning on having another kid on that trip, though,” he said.

Minnesota family stranded in Brazil with prematurely born baby set for joyous homecoming next week (2024)

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