I hear that most young urban Ethiopians speak Amharic more than their tribal/ethnic languages.
Is this true? Any Ethiopia expert here?
Ethiopia in the last 27 has made huge progress when it comes to helping ethnic groups use their native language as working language in their respective states and also as primary school education medium. Many Ethiopians can now speak their native language and also Amharic.
You find those who can't speak their own native language mostly in bigger cities like Addis Ababa but especially in rural areas people use their native languages as their first language. In cities Amharic is mostly the lingua franca out of necessity because cities are usually the melting pot of different ethnic groups and the only language that all understand is mostly Amharic. Since we were not colonized, there is simply no other language that can function as communication medium in cities with different ethnic groups. Wherever Ethiopians from different ethnic groups meet they mostly and automatically use Amharic.
This is also the case for states that composed of different ethnic groups like SNNP. Amharic is the official working language out of necessity because there are 56 ethnic groups in this state and there is simply no other language they can all communicate with each other than Amharic. The same goes for Gambella and Beshangul states. They all have Amharic as their official working language.
This is the result of our history, first that we were not colonized and second with the exception of few states like may be Tigray, many of the cities in Oromia and South etc. were established by Amhara/Abyssinian rulers and their administrations. Cities like Addis Ababa for example were from the start Amharic speakers and the surrounding "natives" came later as "foreigners" in the cities who needed to learn both Amharic and the "city" life from scratch. So in a sense many cities and towns in Ethiopia were Amharic speaking from the start and until today Amharic is their natural street language.
Tigray cities were not established by Amhara rulers because Amhara rulers usually didn't go there for the luck of farm land. But in almost every city in Tigray you can use Amharic without any problems. In fact during the last 27 years the TPLF purposely promoted Amharic in Tigray so that Tigreans could hold federal positions without any problems and dominate business in Addis Ababa and in other cities. Currently, kids that were born and grown in Mekele for example speak perfect Amharic even without any accent. You wouldn't know from their accent whether they are from Addis or Mekele. Because of the domination of Amharic in Tigray, Tigreans tend to use many Amharic words in their Tigrigna language and hence Eritreans think Tigreans don't speak pure Tigrinya. Eritreans tend to use more of Arab and Italian loan words.
Because of the domination of Amharic in the cities, it has also unprecedented domination when it comes to medias and entertainment etc. like TV Stations, Radio, Movies, Theater, Books, Newspapers, magazines etc. The domination is second to none. From all private TV and Radio channels for example over 90% are Amharic based. That gives you the level of domination. I think this is because of the companies that sponsor and run ads through these channels. They want to reach the widest possible audience and there is currently no language you can achieve this other than Amharic. Kana TV is a case in point. Because all its movies are translated in Amharic, it has suddenly became #1 in the number of viewers.
I don't think it is fair to call Amharic, exclusive Amharan language anymore though. It is more of Ethiopian. Different ethnic groups like Oromos, Eritreans, Tigreans etc. contributed a lot to Amharic in literature, music, theater etc. One of the #1 top writer was for example was an Oromo by the name Tsegaye G/Medihn who has such huge impact in Amharic litrature. There were also Eritrean and Tigrean top Amharic book authors. So many of Ethiopians contributed to Amharic that in my view Amharas can't claim Amharic alone. I think it is because of its "Ethiopian" nature that it is almost unanimously accepted as the de facto Ethiopian language. No Ethiopian party or organization asks to abandon it as the federal working language but rather many ask for adding more languages to it like Afan Oromo. Everybody recognizes without Amharic there is simply no medium of communication for Ethiopians. You can't just replace it with English or so. That is not gonna work.
In my view at least Oromo and Somali should be added to the federal working language even-though the strength of Amharic doesn't mainly come from its official status but rather from its day to day function as being the lingua franca.