I hesitate to recommend the revival of the custom, because I've known a few people who'd use the occasion for a final nasty jab. We don't have the infrastructure of expectations to curb abuses.
Nevertheless I like the idea of having a get-together for a final blessing. It could be a hard to muster the energy to say much, but that's one reason we have microphones. And it could take a long time, with plenty of rests, to talk to everyone. And there could be expectations that everybody get comparable amounts of face time, which isn't remotely reasonable but... And I can imagine expectations that everybody use insincere happy talk. And things get amusing if the dying person recovers to live a few more years (my late mother-in-law was very close to death several times in the years before she died).
Still, if the opportunity is there, it seems a shame not to try.
On a related note, I hope you read David Warren's column about his mother's death.
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There's an Ole and Lena joke about the children all coming to see Ole before he dies, but then they go off, and he gets up to eat some brownies he can smell. "Ole, you leave those alone." says Lena. "Those are for after the funeral."
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