Arnold Fine


Arnold Fine was an editor and columnist, known for editing The Jewish Press and a humor columnist.
He was known for his "I Remember
When." For decades his writings, which included a companion feature titled "A Bi Gezunt," were on the back page, and subsequently on the inside of the back page.
He also published 2 volumes of Abi Gezunt

Serious side

His I Remember When column at times wiped out his only-humor Abi Gezunt when he had something serious to tell his readers. Going beyond his "Who invented the telephone", he tackled topics such as
After his military service during World War II, he did news photography for small NYC newspapers and went to college at night, courtesy of the GI Bill. It was his photography freelancing that brought him to "The Brooklyn Daily and then The Brooklyn Weekly" where he met
The late Rabbi Shalom Klass, prior to the latter's founding of The Jewish Press.
Following his baccalaureate and a master's degree in education, he became a Special Ed teacher for the NYC school system, working with brain-injured children.
Prior to his passing he developed Parkinson’s disease.
He and his wife, who predeceased him in 2006, saw children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.

I Remember When

Atop I Remember When is a unique feature: the letters are designed to resemble Hebrew letters. For example, the "I" is a "Final Nun." The "R" is a "Koof" with an extra foot.
The series, described as "chronicling Jewish life in New York City in the 1930s and 1940s," was introduced in the mid-1960s, and was said to be "timeless" and transmitting "warmth and nostalgia.” The Jewish Press said they'll reprint Fine's writings.
An assemblage of some columns was published in 1992.