However, 0 is not included under multiplication, so there are only 108 elements. This comes under Fermat's Little Theorem: a^{p-1} \equiv 1 \bmod p. In this case the prime is 109.
Now, while you may not understand group theory, I am going to quote a theorem of LaGrange: The order of the element divides the order of the group.
Which is this case means that an element either requires the power of 108 (primitative root) or it requires a divisor of that number.
Consider in the above we have the case that, the smallest power for a given a is 5, which does not divide 108, then a^5 \equiv 1 \bmod 108 Well then since a^5 works, if we multiply this by 21, it should also work, and since 108 works then:
a^{105}\equiv a^{108} \equiv 1 Mod 109, which after division tells that some element we thought required the power of five, need only be cubed to become 1. A contradiction. (Of course, this could be carried on further considering 2x5-3x3 =1.)