Make is the standard build tool for everything C/C++. Many others have stepped to the plate, but even when they were useful and successful, they never achieved the ubiquity of make.
Make is installed on virtually every Unix-like machine out there. No matter if you're working with AIX, Solaris, Irix, BSD, or Linux, if there's a compiler installed, there's also make.
Some of the "replacements" (like Automake, CMake) even create Makefiles, which are in turn executed by make.
I would definitely recomment becoming familiar with make. If handled by someone who took the time to learn about make, it is a powerful tool, which can be used in a number of ways not even necessarily related to software development.
Even if you end up using a different build tool in the end, you will be able to "recycle" the lessons learned with make. And the sheer number of make-built projects means that there will always be the chance that you have to make head and tails out of an existing Makefile.
One thing, though. Get it right from the beginning.