As Selah Marley walks out on stage, there’s something quietly striking about it. Not because of her last name, though that does carry a lot of weight, but because of what she did with it. Selah opened the tribute show for her mother Lauryn Hill at the 2026 BET Awards. Lauryn Hill was receiving the Living Legend Icon Award. She sang. She looked at her mom. It seemed like the whole complicated, beautiful, and sometimes painful story of that relationship was right there in the room for a moment.
Selah Louise Marley was born in Miami on November 12, 1998. That same year, her mother Lauryn Hill put out The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, an album that changed the way music could be made. It couldn’t have been easy for her to grow up as the daughter of one of the most famous and closely watched artists of her time. That’s what Selah herself said. In 2020, she went on Instagram Live and talked honestly about her traumatic childhood. She said her father, Rohan Marley, wasn’t there much, and her mother’s strictness left scars she was still working through. What they said was real and honest, and the internet did what the internet does: it made everything sound worse.
Lauryn Hill replied in public, and the statement she released is worth reading carefully. She did not argue against the punishment. She didn’t agree with the way things were put together—that a Black mother raising children in public, under a lot of pressure, and fighting battles that society hadn’t caught on to should be judged without that background. It seems like both were true at the same time. The pain Selah felt was real. And Lauryn’s being alone was too.

Being tense is part of what makes Selah so interesting to look up to. She grew up in South Orange, New Jersey, Miami, Los Angeles, and Columbia, New Jersey. She went to Columbia High School and then NYU’s Gallatin School of Individualized Study, where she studied philosophy, comparative religion, and science. Someone who is happy to coast on their famous last name doesn’t have that kind of resume. She started modeling when she was thirteen and was in Teen Vogue. By the time she was twenty-one, she had been in ads for Chanel, Dior Beauty, Calvin Klein, Fenty Beauty, and Beyoncé’s Ivy Park line. She was named one of 2016’s “it” kids in fashion by the New York Times. The next year, she made the Maxim Hot 100.
Things haven’t always gone well. Selah walked in Kanye West’s Yeezy SZN 9 show in Paris in 2022 with a shirt that said “White Lives Matter.” It was a quick and loud backlash. Many people didn’t agree with her defense, which was that she had thought about it and wasn’t acting like a hive mind. Even though it’s still not clear if that moment hurt her career in the long term, it did show that she is willing to make choices that cause problems. People will likely have different ideas about whether that shows bravery or bad judgment.
Music has also been a part of her life, though not as much. She put out an EP called “Star Power” in 2021 and several singles since then. Maybe she’s still trying to figure out what kind of artist she wants to be. Or she could be right where she wants to be, going at her own pace and doing things her way.
Zion, Joshua, John, and Micah are her sons, and Selah and Sara are her daughters. Five of her children are with Rohan Marley, and Micah is with someone else. Sara doesn’t live a very public life. Selah picked something that is more in the middle.
Seeing how this has played out over the years is interesting because Selah doesn’t seem to be defined by anger. The moment at the BET Awards wasn’t just a performance. It seemed like something was meant to be given. If there isn’t something real behind it, you don’t sing to your mom on national TV. No matter what their complicated childhood looked like on the inside, it looks like these two women have found their way to each other, though it’s not perfect, because that’s how most real relationships work.
