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 stopped praying during his time in the concentration camps because he felt abandoned by God. Witnessing the horrors of the Holocaust made him question his faith and struggle with the idea of a loving and just God allowing such atrocities to occur. This crisis of faith led him to stop praying.
Elie Wiesel starts praying in the book "Night," but he struggles with his faith throughout the Holocaust. He questions God's presence and struggles to maintain his faith in the face of such extreme suffering and evil.
He felt strong, and said he had stopped pleading. He was not able to feel sorrow. He observed the prayer like a stranger.
Moshe the Beadle was a poor foreign Jew that lived humbly and worked all time in the town's synagogue. People from Sighet often helped him by giving his some money or food. Even though he was a "master" in the art of incognito, meaning that he was very good being "invisible" to people, nobody ever felt encumbered by his presence. Nobody ever felt embarrassed by him (pg. 1). The relationship of Moshe and Elie began one day at dusk that Elie was praying. Moshe asked Elie: "Why do you weep when you pray?" (pg. 2). Elie was like, well, why do I breath, why do I pray? It was like natural for Elie to weep while praying. Elie wanted a master to help him with his studies of the cabbala, but his father disagrees with the idea (pg. 1). He and Moshe wanted answers of questions they had about God; they were very into religion matters.
Elie was 15 when they arrived at Auschwitz Shlomo was 50. (Shlomo is Elie's father) The others I don't know
Keep the Commandments of God and be an imitator of Christ (disciple).
No, it is not considered a sin to fart while praying in most religious beliefs. It is seen as a natural bodily function and not something that is intentionally done to disrespect the act of praying.
As they approached the crematory they recited the Kaddish
in
Praying aloud so that others can hear you. While prayer itself is a personal thing, the echoed sentiment of a large group is very effective.