Very strictly speaking, no religious group was targeted by the Nazis on religious grounds. Perhaps you are thinking of the Jews, but they were targeted as a race; then there were the Jehovah's Witnesses, but they were targeted for 'civil disobedience', not for their religion as such.
The Jews were the main target in Germany. The German genocide is also called the Holocaust.
Soviet POWS
Jews because Hitler hated them
there were people from every (substantial) group who wrote stories.
Jehovah witnesses as well as other people religions
Almost every group was not a target in the Holocaust. Jews were the target, you could also argue that gypsies were a target also.
americans
The Jews were the main target in Germany. The German genocide is also called the Holocaust.
The Holocaust did not discriminate by age group.
The main victims were Jews from all the nations invaded by the Nazis.
Jews
Primarily Jews, but other minorities were targeted by the Nazis.
The Nazis organized the holocaust
A religion group is a community of people who share common beliefs, practices, and rituals related to a specific religion. Members of a religion group often come together for worship, spiritual guidance, and to support each other in living according to their religious beliefs.
The Patriot Act does not target any individual religious group. If a certain religious group feels as if they are being targeted by the bill, it is most likely because they fit a specific profile. You may, in theory, be more inclined to be targeted if you are of Middle Eastern decent due to the common threat coming from that region. However, it would not be based on you religious involvement. Ideally the bill is nondiscriminatory and will not target any race, color, sex, religion, etc., but the people enforcing the law may be prejudice and create feelings of unease.
There will always be a chance that a holocaust could happen anywhere and to any group of people.
they are called 'bystanders'.