- Ahmad Hilmi of Filibe
Ahmad Hilmi of Filibe (1865-1914) is a well known Turkish
Sufi writer and thinker. In Turkish he is usually called as "Şehbenderzâde Filibeli Ahmed Hilmi" ("Ahmad Hilmi of Plovdiv Son of A Consul"). Being a Sufi, his thoughts were influenced by the Sufi thought, more specifically thewahdat al-wujud , greatly. He also supported the anti-materialistic way of thinking and was a great rival to his materialist contemporary writer and thinkers.Biography
He was in
Plovdiv (Filibe), which is the reason why he is called "Ahmad Hilmi of Filibe" ( _tr. Filibeli Ahmed Hilmi). His father, Süleyman Bey, was a consul. This is where his title "Şehbenderzâde", meaning "son of a consul", comes from. He has taken his first education from the religious official ("müftü") of Plovdiv, until he moved toİzmir with his family. Later he entered Galatasaray Lycee. Upon the end of his education, he started to work as a government official inBeirut . Due to a political problem he ran away toEgypt fromBeirut . In 1901 he returned toİstanbul , but later he was arrested and exiled toFizan . Here his interest inSufism grew and he started to believe in the Sufi thought ofwahdat al-wujud (وحدة الوجود, "unity of being"). His entry into Sufism changed his views greatly and the influence of Sufism on his works are very clear.In 1908, following the declaration of the Constitutional government ("Meşrutiyet") he returned back to
İstanbul . Here, he started to publish a weekly newspaper named "İttihat-ı İslam" ("Islamic Union"). However the newspaper could not continue for a long time and he started to write in some other papers. In 1910, he started to publish another weekly newspaper named "Hikmet" ("Wisdom"). The same year, he established a publishing house named "Hikmet Matbaa-yi İslâmiyesi" ("Wisdom Islamic Publising"), which published mostly works on Islamic thought.With his own unique thought he started to criticise "İttihat ve Terakki Cemiyeti" ("
Committee of Union and Progress "), mostly in his newspaper "Hikmet", which was turned into a daily paper from weekly by the year of 1911.Due to his thoughts and his great efforts to publish them, his paper "Hikmet" was banned, along with his publishing company, and he was exiled to
Bursa . However, following the end of his exile, he started to publish "Hikmet" again. As a result of his ideas, which were not close to any major political group of the time, his paper could not continue to publish for very long. His masterpiece is the famous "A'mâk-ı Hayâl ", ("The Depths of Imagination") which is about thewahdat al-wujud .Writing many pieces, most of which are Islamic and anti-materialistic, he also published a humor magazine named "Coşkun Kalender". Apart from his writer identity, he also worked as a philosophy teacher in Dârü'l-Fünûn (Istanbul University).
He died in October, 1914 due to poisoning. It is not very clear if he was "killed" by poisoning, however there is a very renowned claim that he was poisoned by
Freemason s, who were his well known rivals. This claim is not proved.External links
* [http://www.kultur.gov.tr/EN/BelgeGoster.aspx?17A16AE30572D3138007620E7D5602E80BF5B4755D05B9EB "Şehbenderzâde Filibeli Ahmed Hilmi" from the Republic of Turkey, Ministry of Culture and Tourism Website]
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