I began coming to Anshe Emes in the summer of 1987. Within months, I became a "lifer". I've raised my family with the guidance and close personal friendship of Rabbi Summers.
It's a synagogue for people who like to serve the community, not one for someone who pays their dues and expects to be served.
Anshe Emes, a modest congregation, is disproportionately filled with community leaders who spearheaded the building of the large community eruv, built a local mikvah for utensils, became a role model that later was widely emulated in an all-day Tisha B'Av learning program, led with one of the first summer SEED programs, and so much more.
If you want to be the director of a committee, raise your hand. Since the shul is family-owned (built by the rabbi's father), the politics and posturing and throwing weight around that is typical simply isn't found at Anshe Emes.
It's a place of spiritual growth. Yeah, that comes at the expense of congregants feeling uncomfortable trying discuss talk sports scores and stock tips during services... but we like it that way. Services are led by congregants... not performers.
It's among the few synagogues in Pico-Robertson where you might find a black-fedora'd yeshiva alumnus, a sandaled and knit-yarmulke'd Zionist Israeli veteran of the IDF, a Hasid in a shtreimel, a conversion to Judaism candidate... all sitting in the same row.
It's not fancy. It's home. My sons were held by Rabbi Summers for their brises. My daughters were named here, had the Rebbetzin as a high school teacher and role model, and (the ones married so far) were blessed under their chupahs by Rabbi Summers.
Being an Anshe Emes member, for those of us who are baseball fans, is not unlike being a Chicago Cubs fan. Not much glory if one counts the value of a team merely in championship rings... but for the purist, tradition is EVERYTHING. Anshe Emes isn't well-to-do, but it's deeply rich in tradition, If you want the kind of shul your great grandparents probably would have been comfortable in...and which your great grandchildren would be comfortable in as part of the chain from Mt. Sinai to the Moshiach, this is the place.
It's not the place for egos who'd rather have a hit TV show, be the mayor of LA, own the Dodgers, whatever... Once one is willing to "aseh lecha rav" (make for yourself a rabbi) as the Mishnah Pirke Avos instructs and grow spiritually... try Anshe Emes for a few months.
Robert F. is right... the late Shabbos afternoon mussar/ethics class is special and a great introduction to the values and wisdom taught by Rabbi summers, and of many stories learned over the years, including those from living in the home of the previous Rosh Yeshiva of the Chofetz Chaim Yeshiva. There is Torah one might hear from a rabbi who learned from lectures of other rabbis. There is subtle, even deeper Torah one learns from a Rabbi who had years of seeing and living in the home of one of the Torah leaders of the last century. The mussar shiur starts 45 minutes before mincha, the afternoon service, roughly 70 minutes before sunset. That means before 4pm in the winters and close to 7pm in the summers. The synagogue website always has a calendar with specific times.
Shul-shopping? Give it 100 days. I think you'll find it among the best investments in your spiritual growth you've ever made.
p.s. For the one negative review? Look at the pattern of his other reviews. The positive reviews are mostly for places where he doesn't interact with people. Everything else that isn't focusing on animals or his teeth or his back gets bitter negative reviews. Has he given any of those single-starred reviews a second chance? Doesn't seem so. Contact me if you ever plan to return, Moshe N... and I'll try to improve your second visit. I've gone to Anshe Emes since, as I've said, since 1987... I don't have a single recollection of Rabbi Summers "demanding" anything of a visitor. That's simply not his M.O. The entire Slobodka approach to mussar (personal character development) focuses on elevation, never reproach. Are you even sure that it was Rabbi Summers who said something to you and not a visiting rabbi? Before a one-star review, a truth-seeker would seem to want to dig a little deeper before leaving that as a permanent legacy. read more