Robert Burale is one of Kenyaโ€™s best-known city preachers, motivational speakers, and relationship coaches. His public persona โ€” stylish, outspoken, and media-savvy โ€” has kept his private life in the spotlight.

The short, highly publicised marriage he had in 2012โ€“2013 drew attention not only because of the people involved but because both sides later gave different accounts of why it ended.

In this article, we will pull together contemporary reports, interviews, and public statements to explain: who his former partner is, why they separated (according to each side), and what both parties are doing now.

Robert Buraleโ€™s best-known marriage was to gospel singer Rozinah Mwakideu (sometimes spelled Rozinah Mwakideo/Mwakideu in media reports), who is also the sister of media personality Alex Mwakideu. The union was brief โ€” Burale himself has repeatedly said the marriage lasted โ€œone year and two days.โ€

(There has been some public confusion in coverage about the โ€œbaby mamaโ€ and whether the woman who co-parents with Burale is his former wife; local outlets have clarified details in different pieces. Where reporting varies, this article flags the claim and attributes it to the source.)

In interviews and media statements, Rozinah has been candid about why she walked away. She has accused Burale of misrepresentation in their relationship โ€” specifically citing undisclosed debts, dishonesty, and, in some reports, infidelity.

Multiple entertainment outlets published her version after she spoke publicly about the breakup, describing a relationship that didnโ€™t match what she had been led to expect.

Buraleโ€™s public explanations have been different in emphasis. In interviews, he has said the marriage โ€œbroke down so fastโ€ and pointed to communication breakdowns and a failure to cultivate friendship and time together โ€” essentially framing it as a mismatch in timing, priorities, and expectation rather than the dramatic allegations Rozinah made.

In later interviews, Burale also denied claims of infidelity while acknowledging regret that the marriage failed.

This is common in high-profile separations: two people emphasize different causes. Rozinahโ€™s comments focus on behaviour she says she experienced (debts, mistrust), while Buraleโ€™s reflect his view that the relationship lacked the right foundation and time to grow.

Independent reporting repeats both accounts; neither side has produced legal documents (publicly) that settle all contested factual claims, so most public understanding relies on media interviews and statements.ย 

After the breakup, Rozinah continued in gospel music and media circles. She has released music, performed, and been involved in public interviews.

In more recent years, she faced health challenges โ€” including a serious hospitalisation in 2021 that was widely reported โ€” and has also publicly celebrated moving on into a new relationship and family developments (she has spoken about being a grandmother).

Her story since the split is one of continuing her music career while rebuilding her personal life.

Burale has remained highly visible as a preacher, speaker, author, and relationship coach. He has spoken about being celibate since the marriage ended in 2013, and about the lessons the experience taught him about friendship, intimacy, and choosing a partner.

He is also a public father, frequently sharing posts about co-parenting his daughter Lexie. Burale has written and published work on relationships and masculinity and continues to appear on TV and at events.

He has on record said he intends to remarry when the right relationship comes along.

Despite the split, several sources note a pragmatic pattern of co-parenting: Burale and his daughterโ€™s mother (reported variously in articles) have maintained public interactions around their childโ€™s milestones.

Both sides have at times praised each otherโ€™s handling of parenting responsibilities in media pieces, and Burale has publicly commended mature co-parenting.

Major contemporary reports and interviews from The Standard, TUKO, Pulse, Nation, and other Kenyan outlets were used to compile this article.

If youโ€™d like, I can compile a printable list of links or prepare a shorter social-media-friendly summary for your blog with pull quotes.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *