Jaelah unfurls like a sonnet of sun-kissed hills, a lyrical offshoot of the ancient Hebrew name Yael – the fearless mountain goat whose nimble ascent once saved a people in desert legend. Pronounced jay-LUH, it glides over the tongue with the warmth of an early dawn, each syllable painting terracotta skies and whispering olive branches upon the imagination. Within Latin-American circles, it resonates like a gentle marimba, weaving a tapestry of tierra y sol around its bearer, kissing her spirit with both the resilient grace of biblical heroines and the free-spirited joy of a fiesta night. Rooted in antiquity yet blossoming freshly in modern hearts, Jaelah promises parents that their daughter will scale life’s rocky outcrops with unwavering poise, dance atop each summit with an exuberant laugh that might make the cacti blush, and carry in every step the luminous hope of horizons yet to be discovered.