There was a time in ancient Sumer when people practiced what could be described as Reproductive Fidelity. It is one of the three cultural practices that constitute the culture we could call “semitism”, traceable to the early Sumerians. It is a cultural practice that requires a female to keep to only one male for all sexual activities from the age of virginity until she decides not to bear offspring any longer.
This practice was inherited by the Hebrew women, most particularly the women of the Levitical tribe, because this teaching was incorporated into the original Oral Torah handed down to the Hebrews from Abraham who originated from Sumer. This is one of the instructions of the Oral Torah, and the Oral Torah was essentially an embodiment of the three doctrines of semitism.
Down the ages, the true meaning of semitism got buried out of rejection of the culture by the latter Sumerians because they considered it too much of a burden to bear, and they despised their predecessors for procreating in line with its requirements. This revolt is well documented in Sumerian writings discovered in contemporary times.
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