The Depression cut short Faith's schooling,although she went to Cleveland Street night school in Sydney after the war. Her first job was with a dressmaker,then as a domestic help,and she learned the piano. But,when Japanese submarines attacked Sydney Harbour in 1942,she joined the Women's Land Army. Her brother Eddy died on the notorious Burma-Thailand Railway.
Afterwards she became a seamstress,joined the cosmopolitan world of Kings Cross,met people of the Left,including poet Dame Mary Gilmore and writer Len Fox,and developed a long and close relationship with Karl Schultz,a Finnish seaman who jumped ship and encouraged her interest in politics. She took formal singing lessons.
Endorsed as a delegate to the Australian Peace Congress in 1950,Faith came under the influence of Jessie Street,who worked to have the rights of women included in the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights and was an executive member of the World Peace Council.
The two women's backgrounds could not have been different. Street's father traced his ancestry back to Alfred the Great;her husband,Sir Kenneth,was NSW Chief Justice,his father had been chief justice and her son,Sir Laurence,was to be chief justice. Yet Bandler and Street began in 1957,with Pearl Gibbs,an Aboriginal leader,and others,a campaign for a national referendum to alter the Constitution so that the Australian government had powers over Aboriginal affairs previously held by the states.
Gibbs and Bandler formed the Aboriginal Australian Fellowship,with Gilmore and Street as patrons. The Federal Council for Aboriginal Advancement,later the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders,was set up in 1958.
Faith Mussing had met Hans Bandler,a design engineer,in 1950,at an Australian Peace Council musical evening,where she was a speaker and he screened documentaries about Aboriginal culture.
Hans Bandler also knew about discrimination. A Jew born in Vienna,he saw the Nazis march into his country and spent time in Dachau and Buchenwald. He and Faith married in 1952,after her return from the 1951 Berlin Youth Festival in East Berlin.
She had gone with other young Australians,fearing that World War III was about to begin,and wanting to prevent it. ASIO opened files on them and their passports were confiscated on their return. Bandler did not get hers back for 10 years and she lost her dressmaking job at David Jones.
The 1967 referendum was a triumph for Bandler and her campaigning colleagues."The hardest part was to get people to think of the Aboriginal people as people,"she recalled of the vote that gave the first Australians the status of human beings in the census.
The campaign achieved the highest"yes"vote recorded at an Australian referendum - 90.77 per cent. Discriminatory sections were cut from the constitution and the Commonwealth gained power to legislate for indigenous people.
Until 1967,South Sea Islanders had fared better in Australia than had Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders. They had the vote,for a start. But a terrible irony emerged for Bandler and other islanders who had worked for a"Yes"vote.
The referendum led to legislation specifically designed to help Aborigines and Torres Strait Island families,overlooking the 20,000 descendants of the South Sea Islanders,who were not eligible for benefits in fields such as education,health and housing. Bandler had another campaign to fight.
She was not only committed to causes but to good relationships with people. Her father was a lay preacher but his daughter's faith was placed in people. She once said that,if her time were limited,she would like to reach out to the heroes she knew,such as Nelson Mandela,Jessie Street and Paul Robeson,whom she greeted at Sydney Airport in 1960. When she showed the singer a film about the Aboriginal people,tears rolled down his cheeks.
After refusing to accept the MBE from"an empire that had kidnapped and enslaved my father",Bandler was made a Member in the Order of Australia in 1984,an honour elevated to Companion in 2009. Her other awards included an honorary doctorate of letters from Macquarie University and a Sydney Peace Foundation award,presented by Mandela.
One regret of her life was having lost touch with Peter,an Aboriginal boy the Bandlers fostered after he was abandoned in a park north of Armidale. He left to find his own family and did not keep in touch.
Hans Bandler,whose work included as a design engineer on the Warragamba dam,died in 2009. Faith is survived by her daughter,Lilon,son-in-law Stephen Llewellyn,and their daughters,Olivia and Nicola.