In his recent book, Diamonds, Gold and War, Martin Meredith writes about "Oom Paul" Kruger in terms that remind one, in a way, of Jacob Zuma.
Zuma, as we all know, was humbly born (1942 in Inkandla, KwaZulu-Natal province). His father died at the end of World War II, after which his mother took up employment as a domestic worker in Durban. He spent his childhood moving between Zululand and the suburbs of Durban, and by 15 took on odd jobs to supplement his mother's income.
Owing to his deprived childhood, Jacob did not receive any formal schooling. He joined the African National Congress in 1959 and became an active member of the movement's armed wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe in 1962, following the banning of the ANC in 1960. While on his way out of the country in 1963, he was arrested with a group of 45 recruits near Zeerust. Convicted of conspiring to overthrow the government, he was sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment, which he served on Robben Island. But what he lacked in formal education, he later made up for in political cunning.
Meredith writes about Kruger: "The British underestimated Kruger. They regarded him as an uneducated, ill-mannered backveld peasant steeped in bigotry - a takhaar to use the Afrikaner word. They were particularly struck by his ugliness, mentioning it so often that it became shorthand for his whole personality and, indeed, his objectives.
"In middle-age, his face coarsened; baggy pouches had begun to appear under his eyes; his nose had broadened; his mouth seemed set in grim disapproval; his hair, parted on the left and neatly slicked down, was turning grey. His broad shoulders showed a slight sag.
"His Dopper dress - a short-cut black jacket, baggy trousers and black hat - gave him a rather quaint appearance" [Doppers were a more fundamentalist wing of the prevailing Dutch Reformed church]. "His body and clothes reeked of the odour of Magaliesburg tobacco, a weed so potent that young men blanched when he offered them his pouch. Added to this was his habit, so disagreeable to the English, of spitting profusely..."