Behind Bavaria's harsh rhetoric, schools offer migrants warm welcome

(Repeats October 11 story with no changes to text)

* Bavaria's anti-immigration rhetoric particularly harsh

* But state doing "exceptional" job with migrant education

* More than half of asylum seekers are under 25

* CSU poised to lose absolute majority in regional election

By Joseph Nasr

WEIDEN, Germany, Oct 11 (Reuters) - Omar Alnifawi was 16 when he fled Syria's civil war with his family. After four years working menial jobs in Lebanon to help pay for their journey on to Europe, he had given up on ever going back to school.

Six years later, Alnifawi is enrolled at the Europa Vocational School in the southern German state of Bavaria and plans to become a mechanic.

"My friends who live outside Bavaria and who are almost as old as I am ask me: 'How come you can go back to school and we can't?'," he said in the town of Weiden, near the Czech border.

Politicians in Bavaria's conservative ruling party, the Christian Social Union (CSU), are some of the harshest critics of Chancellor Angela Merkel's open immigration policy. But they have also put in place one of Germany's most accommodating education programmes for immigrants allocated to the state.

Their view is if migrants are in Germany to stay, they need to go to school so they can work - a pragmatic strategy they hope will help fill job vacancies, integrate the newcomers and appeal to voters bleeding left and right in Sunday's regional election.

Since the number of asylum seekers started to rise in 2011, Bavaria has raised the age for compulsory education for asylum seekers and refugees to 21, against 18 in the other 15 states. In some cases, like Alnifawi's, educators can apply for an extension to keep migrants in school until the age of 25.

Most of the students are in vocational schools, with the option of moving to university-track high schools if they excel.

Bavaria has spent hundreds of millions of euros since 2015 to hire more than 2,000 teachers to teach German to some 58,500 refugee children. That compares to 1,500 positions set up by Germany's biggest state, North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW), for language classes for 95,000 children.

This year Bavaria has allocated 938 million euros ($1.1 billion) for integration efforts, more than any other state.

It can afford to be generous. The state economy, home to nine blue-chip DAX-30 companies including carmaker BMW, engineering giant Siemens and sports retailer Adidas, grew 2.8 percent last year, outpacing the national rate of 2.2 percent and resulting in a 3-billion-euro budget surplus, the highest in Germany. North Rhine-Westphalia had a deficit.