One of the most radical and under the radar groups with close ties to a nonprofit run by tech millionaire Neville Roy Singham is a pro-North Korea nonprofit that bashes Uncle Sam and plots the demise of US relations with South Korea from its home base in Midtown, The Post has learned.
Nodutdol, which means stepping stone in Korean, claims it was formed to promote “US-Korean understanding and education,” according to its nonprofit tax filings.
But in reality, the group has worked to radicalize American leftists into its cause through a mutual hatred of “US imperialism.”

“As imperialist warmongers and far-right forces threaten Korea’s future, we come together to galvanize the movement for Korea’s liberation,” the group wrote in an invite for its “People’s Summit for Korea,” held in the Big Apple in July.
The three-day event, held at Riverside Church in Morningside Heights, had the 500 people in attendance chanting “tujaeng,” a cry critics say serves as the hermit kingdom’s communist revolution song.
In Colorado during its 2024 “US out of Korea conference,” a member and conference speaker boasted about the dictatorship’s election system.
“US media defines democracy completely differently,” University of Colorado Sociology Professor and Nodutdol member Haruki Eda told the crowd.
Eda, a Korean who grew up in Japan, came to the US “to study LGBTQ+ movements,” according to his personal website.

“In the tradition of communist and socialist election system, we discuss the candidates so thoroughly before we even cast the vote, that’s often why the election result is 100 percent,” he claimed, bizarrely painting this as a “community-based grassroots way of …deciding on our leaders.”
Nodutdol was formed in 1999 by controversial Queens politician John Choe, who stepped down from his post at the city Comptroller’s Office in 2012 during the Bloomberg administration, after The Post reported on his North Korean leanings. Choe has denied this was the reason. He later got Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’ backing during his failed 2021 city council bid.
The group only declared $55,000 in revenue in its last US tax filing, and doesn’t disclose how many member it has — but notably features university professors, film directors and even a US Congresswoman among its directors.

One of Nodutdol’s central demands is putting an end to the US-South Korea alliance. It also pushes for the reunification of North and South Korea.
It’s one of the smallest groups linked to the twisted web of far-left organizations tied to Singham, a US expat living in China. The so-called Singham network includes his nonprofit the People’s Forum and his wife’s Code Pink, which have been linked to Chinese influence operations in a State Department report to Congress.
Nodutdol runs its events out of the sprawling Midtown digs of the People’s Forum on West 37th Street, where it regularly hosts seemingly innocuous events like its “Kimchi Bowl” year-end fundraiser and upcoming YEar of the Horse celebration, which promises to teach about Korea’s revolutionary martyrs.

Lately, much like Singham’s groups, it’s hopped on the anti-ICE bandwagon as it aims to gain traction in the land of the free.
“As anti-imperialists, we know that the violence ICE is wreaking in the US is connected to the same violence Koreans have faced through US intervention and warmaking,” Nodutol posted last week in a promotion for its upcoming new year bash.
“This Lunar New Year, we say: US Out of Everywhere, ICE Out of our Communities!”

“Sometimes it’s as simple as a K-pop dance party that’s like a gateway — other times, it’s very explicit, where it’s like, you’re doing North Korean chants in a church in New York as you hear about the evils of America and how great the North Korean state library is,” said Stu Smith, an analyst for the Manhattan Institute who has studied the group.
“This is still a country who’s very actively trying to undermine and hurt America,” he added. “Just because you’re a nonprofit, it doesn’t mean you get to have free reign to do whatever you want.”
Nodutdol did not return The Post’s request for comment.
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