In South Africa the consensus narrative - shared both by many ANC members and critics of the ANC - is that the party enjoyed a sort of golden age under Mandela when it proudly stood for non-racialism. Under Mbeki, however, this was abandoned for a much narrower Africanism and this trend has continued unabated under Zuma to such an extent that Jimmy Manyi, the chief government spokesman, could openly support plans to throw Indians and Coloureds out of their jobs to make way for Africans - and still keep his job.
But this narrative is wrong. Start with Mandela's famous speech from the dock in which he famously argued that the ANC, having opposed white domination, would be equally opposed to black domination. Given what ANC rule has actually been like the question is, was Mandela deliberately lying or did he simply fail to understand the nature of his own movement?
The latter is surely the case. Mandela had emerged as a leader when the ANC was still relatively weak, when it had failed to mobilize the bulk of the African population, and when it was powerfully opposed by the PAC. All of which gave old mission boys like Mandela considerable latitude as leaders.
By the time he emerged from jail almost three decades later the party was a completely different animal: it had won mass support, the PAC had been overwhelmed and its support base won over, and Mandela as leader now had little latitude. No sooner had he won power than the murmuring began that he was devoting far too much time to soothing the whites - and he had to pay attention.
Similarly, he was roughly told to stop preaching about Aids because it was not popular among ANC supporters, so he stopped.
Moreover, the great lynchpin of Africanism, affirmative action, was launched under Mandela's presidency and with his full support. Mandela himself reflected the shift, initially pleading for whites not to emigrate but then, when it became clear he was being ignored, he gave the classic Africanist response of "Well then, good riddance to bad rubbish". But he was still deeply naïve about the nature of the movement, saying gravely that he had assumed ANC people were all incorruptible but, sadly, this had not proved to be true. In fact, of course, it was the incorruptible who were the exceptions to the rule.