This paper explores the trajectory of religion in the public realm projected by the African
National Congress after liberation (1994), focusing specifically on the period after
Polekwane. The paper alludes to the rather reluctant presence of religion in the public realm
under Nelson Mandela, traces the ambivalent but increasingly affirmative role under Thabo
Mbeki, outlines the official ANC policy on religion in the “RDP of the Soul” document, and
then analyses how these trajectories have been taken up by Jacob Zuma in the public realm
between Polekwane and the Presidency. The focus throughout is on to what extent there is an
emerging ANC-led ‘shape’ to religion in the public realm, and to what extent that shape
extends beyond the moral to the economic-political domain.