bilal younis is the target group for kayaking he is one of the worlds best kayaker and also sails with his cricket bat which is also his boyfriend he is a very good swimmer too and has swam the length of half the world because he is 3/4 fish also he has set the world record for the fastest time ever in kayaking around the world where he starved himself for 2 weeks this is why he is one of the worlds smallest man
they included jehovas witnesses, communists, jews,homosexuals, and gypsies. also, his primary target was gypsies.
He was involved with Hitler so he for sure targeted Jews. There are probably more but that is the only one I know.
Clint Robertson won a gold medal at the Barcelona Olympics for competing in canoeing and kayaking. The Olympic games in Barcelona took place in 1992.
the list of groups who were not targets would go on for pages, it is easier to list who was a target:
The Nazis mainly targeted:JewsGypsiesPoles & SlavsGay peopleDisabled peopleDissenting clergyCommunistsSocialistsAnyone else the perceived to be an enemyThey hated Africans and Muslims as well, but it's believed they never encountered anyone from these groups.
The target group were groups of christianity.
It's correct: kayaking
newdiv
The Tutsis
Gypsies
Missionary groups tend to target Native Americans so that they can get them to believe in their same Christian beliefs.
In business, a target group of people can be seniors citizens, teens and/or toddlers, for example. The target groups are people an organization directs its advertising message to, and these people are likely to purchase the organization's product or service. Target groups help with an organization's mission, use of resources and long-term goals. It's a matter of survival for an organization to figure-out its target group/ market. If an organization pin-points the wrong target groups than it can't make a profit or fulfill its business mission.
The Times target socio-economic groups A and B, whereas The Sun targets groups C to E.
Don Skillman has written: 'Adventure Kayaking: Inland Waters of the Western United States' 'Adventure kayaking' -- subject(s): Sea kayaking, Guidebooks
One can find information on kayaks or kayaking on several websites such as Smart-start-kayaking, Wikipedia, Paddling, KayakOnline, and RackAttack. One could also find information in sports equipment stores, kayaking schools, and forums related to kayaking.
kayaking
in Canada