Anyways, there is a terrific thread underway on the fittingly named MADboard that explores a number of these issues. Here is a great post from Phaedrus UT:
On December 9, 1933 The LDS Church News Published a article called "Mormonism in The New Germany". The article showed all of the common parallels "between the LDS Church and some of the ideas and policies of the National Socialists." (National Socialists=Nazi)First, Nazis have introduced "Fast Sunday." Second, "it is a very well known fact that Hitler observes a form of living which Mormons term the Word of Wisdom. Finally, due to the importance given to the racial question by Nazis and the almost necessity of proving that one's grandmother was not a Jewess, there no longer is resistance against genealogical research by German Mormons who now have received letters of encouragement complimenting them for their patriotism."
In the 1936 LDS Church News there is a photo of LDS basketball team in Germany giving "Sieg Heil: salute of Nazi Party"
Here is another pair of invaluable quotes from Nevo:
The policy of the National Socialists towards the sects covered the spectrum from total persecution, suffered by the Jehovah’s Witnesses, through the intermittent harassment experienced by the Christian Scientists, the New Apostolic and Seventh Day Adventist Churches, to the toleration enjoyed by the Mormons, whose existence was, for practical purposes, ignored. . . .
All the sects were observed [by the secret police] and all, except the Mormons, appear regularly in police and S.D. reports. Some were more suspect than others, and it has been seen that the government’s attitude to each sect was determined only partly by the sect’s response to National Socialism, and largely by the political influence its members were able to exert on their own behalf. That the Mormons had convinced the government from the start of the regime of the political and economic importance of their membership to the German state and of their influence outside Germany, may help to explain the ease with which this sect came through the years of Nazi rule."
-- Christine King, The Nazi State and the New Religions: Five Case Studies in Non-Conformity (New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 1983), 181-83.The U.S. ambassador noted in his diary on July 31, 1934: 'Hitler has not dissolved [the Mormons'] organizations or expelled their active preachers. There are other than religious aspects to Hitler's let-up on the Mormons.' American-born Mormon missionaries' skill at basketball brought them favor in Nazi eyes, and four of them were asked to referee basketball games at the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin. The Mormon ardor for genealogy also gave them a certain standing with Nazis. . . .
With the start of the war, the Mormon headquarters in the United States withdrew all its missionaries from Europe. . . . Thomas E. McKay, European president of the Latter-day Saints, was among the last of the 697 missionaries to return. On landing in New York in March 1940, he expressed his regret at leaving Europe and stated: 'The Mormons have never been molested in Germany. We could not ask for better treatment. The only way the Nazis have affected our work is that our Boy Scout movement has been curtailed by the Hitler Youth movement.' The withdrawal of the missionaries from Europe, however, saved the Mormons from many wartime difficulties. In Germany they were among the few small sects which were not banned or dissolved, being accorded a treatment similar to that enjoyed by the Methodists and Baptists.
The Mormons, like other Germans, supported the war effort, and some of their leaders were strong supporters of the Nazi party. One deacon of Jewish descent was sent to the Theresienstadt concentration camp; other partly Jewish members in Hamburg were left unmolested. . . . On the whole, Mormons suffered no special discrimination and persecution."
-- Ernst Christian Helmreich, The German Churches under Hitler: Background, Struggle, and Epilogue (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1979), 404-405.
All very, very interesting. I am quite surprised that the mods have not shut down the thread yet.