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    <title>Cassea Day</title>
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    <lastBuildDate>Thu, 28 May 2026 17:00:21 GMT</lastBuildDate>
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      <title>BYU's Irish Dance Club brings Celtic tradition to campus</title>
      <link>https://universe.byu.edu/campus/byus-irish-dance-club-brings-celtic-tradition-to-campus</link>
      <description>Many associate Brigham Young University with its business school, law school and athletic teams; however, there is a group of students mastering something that started across the Atlantic Ocean: Irish dance.</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 28 May 2026 17:00:21 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>Parker High</author>
      <guid>https://universe.byu.edu/campus/byus-irish-dance-club-brings-celtic-tradition-to-campus</guid>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<html lang="en">                    <head>                <meta charset="utf-8">                <meta property="op:markup_version" content="v1.0">                                    <link rel="canonical" href="https://universe.byu.edu/campus/byus-irish-dance-club-brings-celtic-tradition-to-campus">                                <meta property="fb:article_style" content="default">            </head>                            <body>                <article>                    <header>                                                                            <h1>BYU&#x27;s Irish Dance Club brings Celtic tradition to campus</h1>                                                                            <h3 class="op-kicker">byu irish dance club,irish,dance,Evie Jimenez,cami weight,Cassea Day,byu clubs,dancing,Featured</h3>                                                                            <address>    <a rel="author" href="https://universe.byu.edu/parker-high">        Parker High    </a></address>                                                                            <time class="op-published" dateTime="May 28, 11:00 AM">May 28, 11:00 AM</time>                                                                            <time class="op-modified" dateTime="May 28, 11:00 AM">May 28, 11:00 AM</time>                                            </header>                    <figure> <img src="https://brightspotcdn.byu.edu/62/90/b6fb93e141c2998dd84d3fa5355c/hq720.jpg"></figure><p>Many associate Brigham Young University with its business school, law school and athletic teams; however, there is a group of students mastering something that started across the Atlantic Ocean: Irish dance. </p><p>This Celtic tradition starts at a young age for some, while others learn it for the first time on campus. </p><figure> <img src="https://brightspotcdn.byu.edu/c5/05/1831558a4e33baa3c68105daedb2/304900131-185431097276437-2521716769760989483-n.jpg"></figure><p>Cassea Day, a member of the BYU Irish Dance Club, grew up Irish dancing.</p><p>"We had a family friend who taught it," Day said. </p><p>Day continued Irish dancing into high school until she sprained her ankle and got back into it in college.</p><p>Cami Weight, on the other hand, had never danced before college. She went to the club fair at the beginning of her freshman year and came across the Irish Dance Club. Despite her lack of dance experience, she decided she would give it a try. </p><p>"Walking in and meeting everybody, and then right away it was a welcoming environment," Weight said, of her first day with the club.</p><p>She remembers perfectly that despite having no dance experience, they took the time to teach her the skills that have gotten her to the level she is now, capable of performing.</p><p>The BYU Irish Dance Club is one of many dance clubs on campus, but several aspects make it unique.</p><p>For starters, their shoes. "We have two different shoes. Theres a soft shoe, the one that doesnt make a sound, used for a lot more leaping and jumping," Day said. "Then theres the hard shoe. Thats the one that people compare to clogs or tap shoes, but theyre actually different, both in the material and the way its made.</p><p>On top of that, there are also the big dresses and curly-haired wigs, which, to Day, is pretty different from other styles of dance. </p><p>Evie Jimenez, a masters student at BYU, has been involved with the BYU Irish Dance Club since 2020, back when she was an undergrad.</p><figure> <img src="https://brightspotcdn.byu.edu/4e/84/5999f1d446c49196b4f174ddcf04/img-2670-jpg.jpeg"></figure><p>During Jimenez's freshman year, the club had just restarted, and she has stuck with the club through the years, including in administrative roles. </p><p>A memory that will always stand out to Jimenez was when she sprained her ankle two years ago. </p><p>"The club members rallied around me, drove with me to the hospital, stayed with me there, made sure I had what I needed to recover and checked in daily for weeks," Jimenez said. "I feel so grateful to know how loved I am by my peers."</p><p>From swing dancing to tap dancing, and, of course, Irish dancing, there are many options for BYU students to join a dance-centered club. </p><p>If interested in learning more about the BYU Irish Dance Club, visit its <a href="https://clubs.byu.edu/link/club/18295873486205689" target="_blank">website</a> or Instagram page <a href="https://www.instagram.com/byuirishdance/" target="_blank">@byuirishdance</a>.</p>                                    </article>            <script src="https://brightspotcdn.byu.edu/resource/00000173-da06-d043-a7ff-dece7d790000/_resource/brightspot/analytics/search/SiteSearchAnalytics.5eb1a8a326b06970c71b3a253fbeaa64.gz.js" data-bsp-contentid="0000019c-f828-dd5a-a5fe-f93d80b20000"></script></body>            </html>]]></content:encoded>
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