About Boinayel™

Rooted in heritage. Focused on Memorias.

Boinayel™ is a startup venture in formation, founded and led by a U.S. Army veteran, rooted in Puerto Rican and Taíno heritage, based in Henryville, Pennsylvania, and currently building Memorias™ as its first product.

Why the name Boinayel

The name Boinayel honors Boinayel, the Taíno Rain Giver. For this venture, the name represents rain as a life-giving force: renewal, cultivation, creation, continuity, and the care needed for what is planted to remain alive.

That meaning guides the work behind Memorias: helping family memory remain alive, protected, and meaningful across generations.

A personal origin

For the founder, the name is personal. It connects to Puerto Rican and Taíno heritage, and to family stories of a grandmother he never had the chance to know. Remembered by the family as a true Taíno descendant, her memory became part of the inspiration for building Memorias.

That inherited memory helped shape the purpose behind Memorias: preserving the people, stories, identity, relationships, voices, photos, and legacy that can fade between generations.

Mission

Boinayel exists to build and steward Memorias so families can preserve memory with dignity, privacy, and meaning.

Vision

A future where families can preserve not only names and dates, but the stories, voices, relationships, and memories that explain who they are and where they come from.

Founder background

Boinayel is shaped by a founder with experience across legal training, federal investigative work, military legal support, business administration, documentation, compliance, and technical systems thinking. That mix informs the venture’s careful approach to memory, identity, privacy, and long-term family stewardship.

This public background is intentionally limited to professional credibility themes. Private contact information and sensitive personal details are not published here.

Values

  • Family before platform.
  • Memory before storage.
  • Meaning before data.
  • Privacy before exposure.
  • Stewardship before chaos.
  • Human care before automation.
  • Legacy before convenience.