Liz Cady, a member of the Essex-Westford School District Board, critiques Critical Race Theory in Rutland on June 16. File photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

A member of the Essex-Westford School District board drew swift criticism online for an essay that equated public discourse about unvaccinated people and Jews in Nazi Germany.

In an essay published by True North Reports and the Vermont Daily Chronicle earlier this week, Essex-Westford board member Liz Cady wrote that the same โ€œrhetoricโ€ describing people who are not vaccinated against Covid-19 โ€œwas used in the years leading to WWII and during.โ€

During the Holocaust, โ€œReligion and race were used instead of vaccination status,โ€ Cady wrote. โ€œI am not comparing what is happening now to the horrific genocide that took place in WWII, but I do believe we need to acknowledge the comparison of how that hate started then and how it is happening now: separating people into a desired group versus an undesired one.โ€

The essay sparked an immediate backlash online. Essex-Westford Superintendent Beth Cobb wrote on Twitter that she and school board Chair Erin Knox โ€œwould like to state unequivocally that nothing in Cadyโ€™s article represents the policies or beliefs of our school district.โ€

Cobb did not reply to a Tuesday afternoon email seeking further comment. 

โ€œOne of our roles and responsibilities as board members is to avoid even an appearance of conflict of interest,โ€ Knox said in an emailed statement. โ€œ(Cadyโ€™s) unsanctioned rhetoric is harmful, and implies a disregard for this responsibility to our students, staff, teachers, families, and community members.โ€

State Rep. Lori Houghton, D-Essex, wrote on Facebook that she and the rest of the Essex legislative delegation โ€œare appalled by the latest statement from EWSD School Board Member, Liz Cady and unequivocally reject her twisting of historical facts to fit her narrative.โ€

โ€œWe encourage Essex residents to pay attention to the spoken words of our elected leaders,โ€ Houghton wrote. โ€œWe can do better.โ€ 

The New England Chapter of the Anti-Defamation League called on Cady to read โ€œThe Diary of a Young Girl,โ€ commonly known as the โ€œThe Diary of Anne Frank.โ€ 

โ€œAnne Frank & 6 million Jews were murdered solely because they were Jewish,โ€ the New England ADL wrote on Twitter. โ€œThere is no equivalence to todayโ€™s public health policies imposed on those who choose to remain un-vaxxed.โ€

Cady did not immediately reply to a call and emails Tuesday afternoon seeking comment.

The essay was not the first time that the school board member, who was elected to the seat in March, has waded into controversy. 

At town hall-style meetings in Rutland and Essex, Cady spoke out against school equity and inclusion initiatives, saying they seek โ€œto divide people by race to want the same outcome for each group, often using racial discrimination to get it.โ€

She also has compared Black Lives Matter protestors to Nazis, saying that the Nazisโ€™ rise to power looked โ€œvery similarโ€ to the โ€œtactics employed by the BLM organization.โ€

In her essay this week, Cady wrote that โ€œmany commentaries to VTDigger and comments on news storiesโ€ contained a common thread. 

The theme, according to Cady, was that โ€œthe unvaccinated shouldnโ€™t be able to clog up hospitals and that unvaccinated nurses and doctors should have to work in their own place where they can care for the unvaccinated,โ€ she wrote. โ€œThen, the vaccinated can attend regular medical facilities without worry or having to wait on the unvaccinated.” 

She then repeated the sentences with the word โ€œunvaccinatedโ€ replaced with โ€œJewsโ€ and the word โ€œvaccinatedโ€ replaced with โ€œAryan.โ€

โ€œOrdinary, every day people are being manipulated to allow hate in this modern-day situation of vaccinated versus unvaccinated through the use of fear,โ€ she wrote.

It was not clear exactly which VTDigger commentaries she was referring to. But one Dec. 21 commentary, by South Strafford resident John Freitag, proposed setting up a โ€œhigh quality field hospital for those who are unvaccinated who get Covid-19.โ€

Freitag argued that the plan โ€œcould lessen some of the tension now felt between the vaccinated and unvaccinated, while freeing up our hospital space for traditional care and lessening the burden on health care workers.โ€  

And a Nov. 18 essay by Saxtons River writer Elayne Clift proposed setting aside 20% of beds for unvaccinated Covid-19 patients. 

The other 80%, Clift wrote, would be for โ€œanyone requiring care at any level in order that their lives or health not be held hostage to those who have made choices that are not only deeply selfish but dramatically dangerous.โ€

Previously VTDigger's government accountability and health care reporter.