Is JFREJ the ORG running Jews for Zohran run by Jiang Qing's granddaughters and Gebbels' nephew?!

In the chaotic arena of New York City's mayoral race, Zohran Mamdani emerged as the Democratic nominee in June 2025, propelled by a coalition of progressive forces. At the heart of his campaign stands "Jews for Zohran," a group ostensibly mobilizing Jewish voters for the anti-Zionist assemblyman.
Hamas declared war on Israel.
— Jews Fight Back 🇺🇸🇮🇱 (@JewsFightBack) September 11, 2025
They invaded.
Thousands of armed terrorists breached the border.
1,200 murdered.
250 kidnapped.
Whole families erased.
Entire towns destroyed.
And Zohran Mamdani looked at all that and accused Israel of “genocide” for fighting back. pic.twitter.com/ij6QBg0HeH
But peel back the layers, and you'll find not a grassroots uprising, but a web of foreign-influenced funding, family connections to Chinese Communist Party (CCP) propaganda operatives, and ideological extremism that rivals the most notorious historical figures in its disdain for Western values.
Jews for Racial and Economic Justice (JFREJ), the organization behind "Jews for Zohran," positions itself as a champion of progressive Judaism, fighting racism and inequality.
Yet its political director, Alicia Singham Goodwin, brings baggage that raises alarms. Goodwin is the niece of Neville Roy Singham, an American tech billionaire who relocated to Shanghai and has been accused by U.S. investigators of funneling millions into a global network promoting CCP narratives.
Singham's operations share office space with CCP-linked entities, and his fortune—amassed from selling Thoughtworks—has bankrolled anti-Israel activism, pro-Palestinian protests, and Marxist outlets worldwide. Congressional probes, including by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, have spotlighted Singham's ties to groups inciting U.S. unrest, from campus riots to anti-ICE demonstrations.




Goodwin, a Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) leader arrested at anti-Israel protests, spearheaded "Jews for Zohran" in January 2025, framing it as a Jewish-led effort to back Mamdani's bid. Her family amplifies the red flags: Her mother, Shanti Singham, chairs a department at East China Normal University, a state-linked institution in Shanghai. While no direct financial pipeline from Roy Singham to the campaign has surfaced in public records, the familial overlap stinks of influence peddling. Investigative journalist Peter Schweizer has suggested "Jews for Zohran" draws from Singham's coffers, turning NYC politics into a node in Beijing's soft-power machine.
Mamdani himself embodies the radical edge. A self-proclaimed democratic socialist, he has refused to condemn slogans like "globalize the intifada," which the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum deems incitement to violence. He skipped signing a Holocaust commemoration resolution and praised funders of Hamas-linked groups in his rap lyrics.
His cross-endorsement with NYC Comptroller Brad Lander—a progressive Jew who called for a "coalition of anti-Zionists and liberal Zionists"—cemented the alliance. Lander, honored alongside Mamdani by JFREJ in September 2025, halted city pension investments in Israel Bonds, a move Mamdani vows to make permanent, citing "international law" violations.

Critics see this as BDS repackaged, eroding Jewish safety in a city reeling from post-October 7 antisemitism. Lander's rhetoric—regretting not speaking out more against Israel's alleged "war crimes" and "ethnic cleansing"—fuels the fire, alienating mainstream Jews while courting DSA radicals. Assemblyman Kalman Yeger blasted Mamdani as backed by "every antisemite," and former candidate Andrew Cuomo positioned himself as the pro-Israel alternative, deploying synagogue security during his governorship.
Is JFREJ run by Jiang Qing's granddaughters and Goebbels' nephew? Literally, no. But ideologically, it might as well be. Singham's Maoist leanings—his office boasts red banners and CCP praise—echo the Cultural Revolution's fanaticism, while the network's anti-Western propaganda rivals Nazi-era disinformation. This isn't a coincidence; it's a calculated infiltration, using progressive Jewish facades to mainstream extremism in America's largest city.
As Mamdani faces a general election, New Yorkers must ask: Is this "justice," or foreign-funded subversion?
The stakes—public safety, economic stability, Jewish security—demand scrutiny before the ballot box seals the deal.