The past week saw the commemorations of COPE flying in thick and fast in the media space. But no one celebrated Thabo Mbeki's courage and loyalty to the ANC even when his ardent supporters continued to spit in the face of his beloved party. The popular suspicions then, suggested that Mbeki was a cadre caught between two worlds: his angry supporters and his legendary party. Was he, or was he not?
In his resignation speech on 21 September 2008, Mbeki said: "I have been a loyal member of the African National Congress for 52 years. I remain of a member of the ANC and therefore respect its decisions". On the face of it, it seemed like Mbeki wanted to dispel any notion among his supporters that he was a coward. They were not to write him off as a weakling who gave in without a fight to Jacob Zuma and his leftist allies.
But Mbeki's pronouncement of loyalty to the ANC might have been deeper than the interpretation COPE's founders offered. It was more than an adherence to principle, but a desire to pave the way forward after bitter infighting and factionalism. He placed the objectives of the ANC's struggle above all personal squabbles and the desire for power.
Thabo Mbeki was a misunderstood man, and the guilty parties were to a large extent those who claimed to be defending his legacy. To complicate matters further, Mbeki sometimes misunderstood himself and what he represented.
For example, Mbeki was right when he blatantly stated that South Africa has two economies, one black and one white. His critics accused him - among other things - of defeating his predecessor's call for reconciliation, as if the process of reconciling can only thrive when the society is blind to reality.
However, it was his supporters who mostly misunderstood most of his insightful analysis to mean that Mbeki must be some kind of an irredeemable messiah: one who cannot be corrected. That Mbeki himself decided to contest for leadership in Polokwane on the grounds of such misguided support would be an indictment on his legacy.