Lauryn Hill took to social media to have a good time her ex-husband Rohan Marley’s 52nd birthday and used the moment to shut down long-running infidelity claims, saying he “never cheated” on her.
Hill also raised eyebrows as she defended her decision to not release one other album after her legendary debut, “The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill,” suggesting Hollywood power players played a task.
Hollywood luminary Lauryn Hill has set the record straight on long-running relationship rumors surrounding her previous marriage, declaring that her ex-husband, Rohan Marley, never cheated on her.
The Grammy winner used a recent birthday post on Instagram to clear up the speculation. She shared a throwback photo of herself and Marley with their children once they were younger, captioning it, “Completely satisfied Birthday @romarley! Now we have been through rather a lot, but I’ll all the time be grateful to you and for you as my protector, my defender, and Father to our beautiful children.”
“I hope you’re being celebrated and appreciated today and daily,” she continued. “For individuals who didn’t know higher, @romarley never cheated on me! I remember the start after we were young, majestic, and uniting our worlds. Have a blessed one, King.”
Hill And Marley’s Split Stays Unclear
Hill and Marley were together from 1996 to 2008 and welcomed five children together, including vocalist YG Marley and model Selah Marley. Although Hill often referred to Marley as her husband, reports suggest they were never legally married.
Speculation has long surrounded the reason behind their split, but Hill denied in 2011 that Marley had “abandoned” her while she was pregnant.
“Contrary to the various reports, Mr. Marley didn’t abandon me while pregnant together with his child,” Hill explained within the since-deleted post, per Hello!. “Now we have had long periods of separation through the years, but our five children together remain a joy to each of us.”
Marley Said He Couldn’t Accept ‘Certain Things’
Nevertheless, Marley maintained in an interview with The Voice around the identical time that although Hill was not a “bad person,” there have been “certain things” he couldn’t “accept” of their relationship.
“As a person, there are specific things I don’t accept,” he said. “And it just so happened that I didn’t accept certain things [in the relationship]. It doesn’t mean she’s a foul person, or I’m a foul person, it just didn’t work out.”
“[Our relationship] is sweet as in … when it comes to being a mother and father to our kids, it’s good. It’s not as perfect as one might want it to be. It’s just the way in which the road went,” he continued.
One other factor that seemingly affected their family dynamic was Hill’s three-month jail stint for tax evasion, during which their five children relied on Marley for care and support.
Lauryn Hill Faced Paternity Claims From Wyclef Jean

Hill faced damaging allegations involving the paternity of her and Marley’s eldest son, Zion, when her former Fugees bandmate Wyclef Jean released his controversial autobiography.
Within the book, titled Purpose: An Immigrant’s Story, Jean claimed the group’s fallout began after Hill allegedly made him consider the kid was his and never Marley’s, per BET.
“When Lauryn gave birth, I learned the reality: the kid wasn’t mine. It was Rohan Marley’s,” he wrote. “And in that moment, something died between us. I used to be married, and Lauryn and I were having an affair, but she led me to consider that the child was mine, and I couldn’t forgive that.”
He added, “She could now not be my muse. Our love spell was broken through her creation.”
Lauryn Hill Blamed Industry Politics For Album Hiatus

More recently, the “Doo Wop (That Thing)” singer caused a stir online when she revealed why she never released one other album after 1998’s “The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.”
Her remarks got here in response to a viral post that suggested she can have run into roadblocks while attempting to release a follow-up project, including creative ownership battles and the exhaustion that got here together with her fame.
Nonetheless, Hill disagreed, suggesting that her long hiatus from releasing albums was more tied to industry bottlenecks, executive power plays, and the pressure that followed her breakout success.
“Whenever you’re inspired and desire to be principled, what doesn’t get talked about enough is the drain… nor the challenge to search out safety so you can create with integrity,” she began. “Most see opportunity as dollars only and infrequently exclude the ‘sense.’”
She then went on a lengthy rant about greed, claiming money began to “degenerate the art” and adding that creativity is “most potent when it’s free.”
“The wild thing isn’t any one from my label has ever called me and asked how we will enable you make one other album, ever!” Hill said. She continued, “With ‘The Miseducation,’ there was no precedent. I used to be, for essentially the most part, free to explore, experiment, and express. After ‘The Miseducation,’ there have been scores of tentacled obstructionists, politics, repressing agendas, unrealistic expectations, and saboteurs EVERYWHERE.”

