What Is a Repass? Memorial Tradition Explained
What Is a Repass? A Memorial Tradition I Learned from My Clients
When I first heard a client refer to their memorial gathering as a "repass," I'll admit — I paused.
I grew up in the South, and I had never heard that term used before. I asked a quick clarifying question, and what I learned reminded me of something I truly love about this work: every family brings their own traditions, language, and meaning to the way they remember a loved one.
And there is always something new to learn.

What does "repass" mean?
A repass (also called a repast) is the gathering that happens after a funeral or memorial service. It's where family and friends come together to eat, talk, laugh, cry, and remember the person who has passed.
In many communities — especially in parts of the Northeast, in Black families, and in Catholic traditions — the word repass is commonly used. In other regions, people might say:
- Reception
- Repast
- Celebration of Life
- Memorial gathering
Different words. Same beautiful purpose.
Why this moment stuck with me
I've been creating memorial slideshows for years, but hearing this term for the first time was a reminder that language matters — and so does listening.
When someone tells me they need a slideshow for a repass, they're not just describing a time on the schedule. They're describing the tone of the moment:
- Less formal than the service
- More conversational
- More storytelling
- More about connection
That helps me shape the slideshow differently — warmer pacing, softer transitions, and a flow that works well in a room full of family members sharing memories together.
Memorial slideshows at a repass gathering
Many families choose to show their slideshow at the repass instead of during the formal service - or at both. And it makes perfect sense.
A repass is where people linger. Where stories come out. Where photos spark laughter and tears at the same time.
A memorial slideshow in that setting becomes more than a tribute — it becomes a shared experience.
Learning from families is part of the work
One of the most meaningful parts of what I do is learning from the families I serve. Every culture, every region, every generation brings something different to how we honor life.
Sometimes that learning comes from:
- A new tradition
- A new phrase
- A new way of gathering
- Or a new way of saying goodbye
And I'm grateful for all of it.

No matter what you call it, the goal is the same
Whether you call it a:
- Repass
- Repast
- Celebration of Life
- Memorial reception
- Family gathering
The heart of it never changes.
You want to honor someone who mattered. You want to share their story. You want to give people a moment to remember — together.
That's what a memorial slideshow is really for.
And if I get to learn a new word along the way? That's just one more reason I love this work.
