What makes multiPaxos a better learning tool isn't multiPaxos for the sake of multiPaxos, but rather Paxos itself. The write-once consensus primitive is a valuable tool (whether you are implementing Raft or multiPaxos) or thing to know. Especially when it comes to flexible / compartmentalized Paxos. Don't get me wrong, the same things can theoretically be done with Raft (if they haven't already), but that single-degree primitive makes it make that much more sense. This is missing from Raft.
It's like learning about a byte and never learning about endianness because everything is pretty much little-endian these days.
There are many algorithms to implement a single wait-free shared register. I like Basic Paxos, don't get me wrong. I also love the Part-time parliament paper's description of it. What I don't care much for is the generalization to multipaxos; too many things left to the imagination, which, in the hands of people like me without Lamport's reasoning skills, is headed for disaster. There is a reason why they say Paxos is too hard, but few people say that about Raft. A raft implementation is maintainable by ordinary mortals, because like I said, there is only one documented recommended way to do it.
It's like learning about a byte and never learning about endianness because everything is pretty much little-endian these days.