Glavish is affiliated to Ngāti Whātua and also of Croatian descent.[4] Her Croatian grandparents arrived in New Zealand in the 20th century, settling near Kaipara Harbour and changing the spelling of their name from the original Glavaš. Their son, Frank (d. 2013), is Glavish's father; her mother is named Nohotakitahi. Before the Māori language revival of the 1980s, it was common for children with Māori first names to be called an anglicised name instead. Glavish's mother's name was abbreviated to Nora; she herself was called Naida rather than Rangimārie.[4][5]
When Glavish was twelve she was placed into state care after admitting to stealing clothes from a washing line; in a 2015 interview Glavish said it was actually a cousin who did this.[4] She was not returned to her family until she was sixteen.
At seventeen, she married and had six children. Eventually she would separate from her husband.[4] In 1975 she went back to work as a telephone operator for the New Zealand Post Office.
In 1984, at a time when the use of Māori phrases was uncommon in New Zealand, Glavish, who was then an Auckland telephone operator,[6] was instructed to stop using kia ora when greeting callers after the post office had received a complaint. She refused to do so and was consequently demoted, with the whole affair attracting much public interest. She was later given back her original job.[7] The Postmaster-General, Rob Talbot, convinced the Prime Minister, Robert Muldoon, to overturn the prohibition on Māori greetings by telephone operators.[8]
Advocacy work
After "the Kia Ora incident" Glavish trained as a Māori language teacher before beginning a career as a Māori cultural advisor predominantly in the health sector.[1][9]
At the 2008 general election, Glavish was a list-only candidate for the Māori Party, ranked at number eight on their list,[12] but was not elected to Parliament. She was President of the Māori Party from 2013 to 2016.[3][9] She stood again on the Māori Party list, with a ranking of 11th, at the 2014 general election,[13] and once more was unsuccessful. As party president, she did not favour reconciling with Hone Harawira's Mana Movement, which had broken off from the Māori Party in 2011.[9]
She did not seek re-election to the presidency in 2016 and was succeeded by Tuku Morgan.[14]