Not quite. Russia has had a long, long history of anti-Semitism. Especially under the Czar, but also under Communism which, despite allowing many people of Jewish descent to rise to positions of great power, was brutally oppressive of anyone who wanted to actually practice the Jewish faith openly.
Israel on the other hand was founded as a haven for Jews fleeing anti-Semitism. The idea that Nazis should be allowed to exist in Israel is like saying that smallpox virus should be allowed to float around in an operating room.
The problem with that analogy is that it makes you sound like you’re saying anti-Semitism shouldn’t be fought against where it’s already found, just in places (like Israel) that are specifically dedicated to countering its influence. If the same attitude had been taken towards smallpox we’d still be dying from it today.
It wasn’t only Jews who wanted to practice their religion openly that met with suppression by the government of the USSR under Stalin and his successors - it was anyone who wanted to practice their religion openly. The Soviet government thought it could eliminate religious sentiment (and, following the Second World War, Nazism) by fiat. Of course that doesn’t work - it merely drives them underground. The sins of Stalinism are legion; they’re not, however, the direct result of the socialist experiment in Russia. As a contrast, here is a quote from a recorded speech by Lenin in 1919 on the subject:
It illustrates quite nicely, I think, the fact that communists realized then (and should realize now) that anti-Semitism wasn’t something inherent in the non-Jewish psyche and that it not only could, but should be fought wherever it is found.
I also wanted to mention that there were many more deaths in Russia during World War II (civilian or military) then there were jewish people that died. So I would think that Russians (in general) would be as much opposed to Hitler admirers, if not more so, then Jewish people.