The weekly journal Hikmet (Ottoman-Turkish: ÃÂéàê; DMG: Ḥikmet; English: "Wisdom"), published in Istanbul from 1910 to 1911, was one of the first sufistic journals that were founded during the Second Constitutional Period. It was published by à Âehbenderzâde Filibeli Ahmed Hilmi (1865-1914), a Turkish Sufi, author and thinker. The journal had the subtitle âÂÂUnity is life and dissension is deathâ (âÂÂðttihad hayattñr, tefrika memattñrâÂÂ). Two volumes with a total of 79 issues were published and covered political, economic and social topics as well as articles on philosophy, islamic mysticism and sufistic literature. Hilmi's criticism of the âÂÂCommittee of Unity and Progressâ (ðttihat ve Terakki Cemiyeti) ultimately led to the suspension of the journal Hikmet. In addition to Hikmet Hilmi also published the journals ÃÂaylak, ðttihat-ñ ðslam and Coà Âkun Kalender.