Contrary to the popular myth of philo-semitism, the (eventual) Prelature of the Hands of Creation (Prelatura Maniorum Creatoris) had, during its early years, an undeniable anti-semitic tinge. St. Adolph Hitler preached that the modern Jews were not a creative race but merely aped or lived off the artistic and cultural capital, even the economic and social creations, of other races. Even more virulent anti-semitic ideas had some currency in the early movement--the extent to which they may be attributed to Father Hitler is controversial--which probably played a role in some of the persecutions of that era. At least in public, however, the saint merely preached the necessity of a Jewish homeland which would oblige the Jewish people to discover their own sources of creation. The role of the Hands in the founding of the state of Israel is well-known and responsible for its philo-semitic image. (It was this doctrine of the regenerative and even creative and holy aspects of settlement that made the Hands popular among colonialists, including in French North Africa with tragic results).* Father Hitler's expectations that the creation of Jewish homeland would eventually result in the mass conversion of Jewish settlers to Christianity were, of course, disappointed.
*Even today, the Hands are disproportionately interested in space expansion, "seasteading," and other such schemes.