CARRY THAT G20 ENERGY STRAIGHT INTO DECEMBER

isiZulu performers sing in front of the famous 20-meter-tall Christmas tree at V&A Waterfront, Cape Town (Image: Armand Hough / Independent News)

In a matter of days, South Africa will step sprightly into the full swing of the festive season. As the famous adage goes: Ke Dezemba Boss! (It’s December Boss!) But this year’s festive will be particularly special. This December, we’ll be riding a wave only a few countries get to experience. The afterglow of the momentously successful G20 Summit will be key grounds for celebration.

The iconic G20 Summit didn’t just put us on the map for a few days, it made clear that our talent, imagination, and innovation are forces to be reckoned with. Now, as millions prepare to travel home, with life spilling into every square, street, and sun-soaked beach, we have a rare opportunity: to channel this global attention into momentum that lasts far beyond the holidays.

This year, the G20 for the very first time – was held on African soil, in our very own backyard: Johannesburg. Leaders across the world laid their heads in South African beds, and were reminded that our nation is more than just a summit venue — it’s a living, breathing story of ingenuity, ambition, and unbridled potential. Our cultures, our traditions, our arts, our landscapes, and so much more, were on full display. From our minerals and ecosystems, to traditional knowledge systems and climate solutions, our society reminded the world to never underestimate us.

G20
Leaders and Heads of State are photographed in a group image during the 2025 G20 Summit in Johannesburg, South Africa (Image: GSMN Files)

We South Africans know the boundless talent and creativity that brews in our communities, but it was especially significant to spotlight our proficiencies when the world was watching. From the youth inventing energy sources from everyday waste, to the child compiling electric cars and working robots from scrap metal, to farmers using indigenous African ecological practices to enhance agri-tech advancements, this G20 Presidency certainly reminded the world how inventive, resilient, and full of potential we truly are.

December, our festive season, gives us a stage to turn this prime visibility into real movement. Roads, railways, and airports overflow. Markets, beaches, and galleries hum with life. All our festive gatheringsfrom formal events to casual braais — are a chance to showcase talent, collaborate, and attract attention that lasts long into the future.

Cape Town Minstrel Troupes Celebration (Cape Town, South Africa) (Image: Gallo Images / Getty Images)

Creative industries are always ready to shine. Although artists, performers, designers, and innovators often struggle to access materials, sponsorships, or critical platforms, December gives them space to connect, collaborate, and make their work impossible to ignore. Entrepreneurs, job-seeking youths and innovators across our society who are actively spearheading tech, social, and cultural initiatives, are now visible to investors, partners, and communities. Their work proves that potential can’t be limited by circumstance.

Emathongeni performing during the 2018 Mkhanda National Arts Festival (Makhanda, Eastern Cape, SA) (Image: Play / SABC)

Women sit at the centre of all this. They carry disproportionate burdens in almost every facet of life — socially, economically, politically and institutionally. In fact, women-led households constitute almost half of all the homes in our nation, yet they still contend with gender pay gaps, discrimination and patriarchal aggressions. Despite this, women continue to find ways to strategically and meaningfully empower themselves.

A mere day before the G20, women made their power undeniably visible, both nationally and beyond our boarders. The G20 Women’s Shutdown, protesting the widespread scourge of gender-based violence, was not merely symbolic, it was a long-overdue confrontation of the several senseless deaths that women die in our society. And what has been achieved by the protest is a fact that has been evident to us for decades now: gender-based violence is absolutely, unequivocally, a national disaster. And finally, the mask has come off, there’s no downplaying this monster.

The G20 Women’s Shutdown, during which scores of women observed 15 minutes of silence during a lie-down protest in honour of the 15 women killed daily in South Africa (Image: Maphuti Mahlaba / UN Women)

What’s worse is that the children are watching. Schools may be closed, but their minds are open. They see the violence, the microaggressions; the quiet cruelties adults pretend aren’t there. But they also see our society, our endless talents, our innovation in communities, creativity in the arts, science in ecosystems, possibilities in agriculture, and connection through digital and social projects. They are absorbing, imagining, dreaming, and the festive season must be used as a prime opportunity to nurture this. Kids across our society deserve to know that opportunity isn’t abstract — it’s something you sketch, mould, and bring to life.

Montecasino Christmas Village, one of many Christmas displays across SA during the festive season (Image: Joburg.co.za)

Food security intersects with opportunity. Grocery prices rise, households stretch budgets, and small farmers struggle to keep up. This is a prime time to spotlight the nationwide plague of food insecurity. As millions head home for the holidays, we feed into local agriculture and push climate-conscious farming forward. And it’s in December that all this quiet, everyday power has the chance to burst into something bigger.

Tourism is another lever. South Africa is at its most alive during this season: beaches, heritage sites, markets, and cultural festivals attract attention locally, continentally and internationally. The G20 reminded the world of our uniqueness. December is the time to convert curiosity into engagement: longer stays, repeat visits, and broader investment in creative, agricultural, and industrial sectors.

The African Penguins of Boulders Beach, Cape Town, which have resided here since the early 1980s (Image: Hideaways)

Small and medium businesses, especially, have been long constrained by inequalities and post-COVID pressures. The festive season, amplified by G20 momentum, allows them to be seen, to attract investment, and to thrive in unimaginable ways.

Digital and technological innovation were not only a key point in our progressive G20 agenda, they are lifeblood of the scores of unemployed people in our nation. From online platforms and hackathons, to entrepreneurial programs — we can build skills, create jobs, and expand opportunity, especially for youth in under-served areas. But engagement with the everyday South African, investing into the unique needs of our vast array of communities, is what will make all the difference.

A young woman harnessing digital advancements (Image: Good Things Guy)

So, as we slide into December with the sun on our shoulders and a rare national momentum at our backs, the task is simple: don’t let this energy fade. Let this festive season be more than a breather — let it be a spark. Because if the G20 showed the world who we are, then December is the stage for our next big move. We’ve been seen, we’ve been heard, and now it’s time to act — to take that visibility and turn it into something that lasts long into the future.

The G20 was a moment, not the story. We are.

Momentum is here. Potential is endless. It’s up to us to use it.

Locally curated beaded Christmas-tree ornaments (Image: Farmer’s Snack)
Christmas decorations in V&A Waterfront, Cape Town (Image: Jaco Marais / DB)
Locally curated beaded Christmas-tree ornaments (Image: iStock)
Walter Sisulu Botanical Gardens (Image: SANBI)

Tswelopele Makoe

Tswelopele Makoe is a Gender & Social Justice Activist, and the Editor at Global South Media Network. She is a Researcher and Columnist, published weekly in the Sunday Independent, Independent Online (IOL), Global South Media Network (GSMN.co.za), Sunday Tribune and Eswatini Daily News. She is also an Andrew W. Mellon scholar at the Desmond Tutu Centre for Religion and Social Justice, UWC. The views expressed are her own.

Author

  • Tswelopele Makoe is a Gender & Social Justice Activist, and the Editor at Global South Media Network. She is a Researcher and Columnist, published weekly in the Sunday Independent, Independent Online (IOL), Global South Media Network (GSMN.co.za), Sunday Tribune and Eswatini Daily News. She is also an Andrew W. Mellon scholar at the Desmond Tutu Centre for Religion and Social Justice, UWC. The views expressed are her own.

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