He felt strong, and said he had stopped pleading. He was not able to feel sorrow. He observed the prayer like a stranger.
Elie felt disconnected from their prayers and struggled with his faith in God, feeling anger, confusion, and doubt. He questioned how a merciful God could allow such suffering and evil to exist in the world.
If your talking about the memoir night, then he felt that god had forsaken him, therefore he would not pray.
In the concentration camp, when others prayed Elie began to feel betrayed and abandoned by God. He questioned His existence because of the horrors he was facing.
Some Orthodox men go to mikvah. Fruits are purchased for Rosh Hashanah. Some people choose to fast.
Elie Wiesel may feel alone because of the horrors he experienced during the Holocaust, the loss of his family members, and the emotional trauma he went through. He may also struggle with survivor's guilt and the difficulty of relating his experiences to others who have not gone through similar suffering.
The death of the man affects Elie by making him question his belief in God and the fairness of the world. When the air raid is over, Elie feels relief that he has survived but also guilt for feeling relieved while others may have died. He struggles with conflicting emotions of gratitude for his own survival and sorrow for the suffering of others.
cho clit reign
Narcissists do believe their own lies and they have no conscience. They don't think about how others feel. Others will percieve them as evil while they feel they are perfectly normal.
Touched by the Holy Spirit...
you proplabaly have diffrent taste buds than others
How you feel when you die depends greatly on the way that you die. Some people have claimed it to be gentle while others claim it is very painful.
depends how you feel about it
Elie kept saying he did not feel well and promise to go back and stayed repeating the same excuse. read the book
Elie feels like he is arguing with death itself because of the immense suffering and cruelty he witnesses during the Holocaust. The continuous death and loss in the concentration camps create a sense of futility and hopelessness, leading Elie to feel like he is fighting against an all-encompassing force that is determined to destroy him and everyone around him.