How the Holocaust Shaped One of Rock’s Signature Bands

Long before rising to Rock & Roll Hall of Fame honors with Rush, Geddy Lee was just the child of Jewish natives of Poland who served as prisoners of war together during World War II.

Morris Weinrib and Mary “Manya” Rubinstein found love despite crushing circumstances under Nazi rule, eventually reconnecting after enduring the horrors of one of the war’s most notorious and deadly stalags.

“They had met in the camps in Poland,” Rush’s frontman told Roman Rogowieckiego of Warner Music Poland. “They were from two different towns, but they were in the same camp. They met and they fell in love. So, it’s kind of a nice story, in a way. They were both in Auschwitz together.”



Auschwitz, the largest of the German concentration camps, was actually a network of death sites operated on Polish land overrun by the Third Reich. As many as 1.3 million people were murdered in these camps alone, with some 90 percent of Jewish descent.

His parents’ early relationship, Lee says, was one of small gestures. Only later, after his father tracked down the woman who would one day become his wife, did their relationship blossom.

A host of rock and prog fans have to be thankful that he did.

[SOMETHING ELSE! REWIND: They didn’t know it at the time, of course, but Rush left us at the very top of their game with 2012’s unexpected finale, ‘Clockwork Angels.’]

“My father would somehow find shoes, and bribe the officers to send shoes to my mother,” Lee said. “My mother was liberated eventually in Germany, as was my father – and they found each other again after the war. Even though there was this horrible background, this horrible time, after the war my father found my mother and they got married. So, out of this horrible thing came – me!”

Young Gary Lee Weinrib was born in 1953. Renamed Geddy Lee, he joined Alex Lifeson in one of the earliest incarnations of Rush in 1968. Neil Peart completed their classic-era lineup in 1974, later writing lyrics for the Holocaust-themed song “Red Sector A” from 1984’s Grace Under Pressure. The group remained together through Peart’s death in 2020.

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4 Comments

  1. Brian Wozniak says:

    I never knew. Wow. I have always admired Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson and Neil Pearts music in RUSH. What a heartbreaking story. It’s amazing that people can come out of tragedy alive in one piece. So sad to hear his father died. That makes liking Geddy Lee even more important.

  2. Brian Wozniak says:

    Also my family survived concentration camps in Poland. My grandfather and his younger brother were snuck out of Poland by different means. But their parents, my great grand parents didn’t survive the concentration camps they died in. My great uncle was very depressed about my great grand parents being killed. He took his life sadly in the in the 1970’s after he arrived in the United States. I have been given garbadge by socipaths on the net for being Polish American. So much so that I know that Nazism is alive and well. True.

  3. Tim St John says:

    My grandfather (100% Polish) was also in two of the camps. He told a much different story. He always asked the questions no one wanted to answer: “If they were really trying to kill all of us, why would be have been given currency for the work we did? Why were there soccer fields where we everyone played, and often? Why were there dental clinics, and a theater, and commissary you could go to but goods? If they truly wanted to exterminate us, why would we have band instruments to play?” He said that when supply lines were cut due to allied bombing and sanctions created by Britain, no food, clothing, or Xyclon B got through to control lice that spread typhus. Most died from typhus, or starvation when supplies didn’t get through.
    It is important to note that he also said that he never once saw, or had even heard of any gas chambers in the time he there.
    Kinda interesting how only Jews were compensated for their capture and suffering, but Poles weren’t, unless they converted. A bit less than 1/2 of all prisoners in the camps were non-Jews. How come they never got a cent?

    • German want to exterminate all jews, and make polish people low educated slaves. They exterminated almost whole polish jews if u want to know. In my home town – there was 1/2 of poles and 1/2 jews – after the war not a single polish jew came back to his home, NOT A SINGLE ONE.
      Also concentration camp like Auchtwitz (O?wi?cim for example) it was the whole complex of camps. Prisoners from one camp could have no idea that in the next camp germans are exterminating ppl.
      After the war 6 million of polish citizens were dead. And you are trying to say that most of them died from typhus ?