Reached on Wednesday, she said, “I’d rather not make any comment at this time.” Asked previously by Politico whether she regretted the post, she said, “No, I don’t.”

The school board’s president, Sudhan Thomas, had planned to offer a resolution at the panel’s regular monthly meeting on Thursday, demanding that Ms. Terrell-Paige step down. “There is no room for any kind of hate or bigotry in Jersey City,” he said in a statement on Tuesday.

His plan was dealt a blow on Thursday when Gurbir S. Grewal, New Jersey’s attorney general, announced that Mr. Thomas was one of five current and former public officials and political candidates being charged with taking bribes in the form of campaign contributions.

Mr. Thomas, whose Board of Education term is to expire at the end of the month, was charged with accepting $35,000 in cash bribes in exchange for steering legal work for the board to a person who was a cooperating witness, Mr. Grewal said.

Christopher Adams, a lawyer for Mr. Thomas, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Separately, the meeting scheduled for Thursday was canceled because of what the school district’s chief of staff, Norma Fernandez, said were concerns that the furor over Ms. Terrell-Paige’s Facebook post could make it difficult to “guarantee everyone’s safety.”

The uproar came a week after Jersey City was plunged into a panic after two people fatally shot a police officer before mounting the deadly assault on the kosher market. It also coincided with the funeral for the slain officer, Detective Joseph Seals, a grim occasion for a city still reeling from one of the most violent days in its recent history.

Elsewhere in her Facebook post, Ms. Terrell-Paige included references to other ways that, she suggested, Jewish interlopers had wronged black residents of the largely African-American Greenville section.