Macron and Netanyahu, today
Macron and Netanyahu, todayHaim Zach / GPO

French President Emmanuel Macron on Sunday marked 75 years since the roundup of some 13,000 Jews to be sent to Nazi death camps, calling France's responsibility a "stark truth" at a ceremony attended by Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.

Speaking near the former site of the Velodrome d'Hiver, the indoor cycle track from which the Jews were deported in 1942, Macron said: "It is indeed France that organized" the roundup. "Not a single German" took part.

The ceremony marked the day when officials of the French Vichy regime in Nazi-occupied France began rounding up 13,152 Jews, including over 4000 children, with the aid of French police, taking them to the Velodrome d'Hiver, an indoor cycle track in Paris.

Fewer than 100 of those who were detained at the so-called Vel d'Hiv and then sent to the Nazi death camps survived.

Macron was the fourth French president to accept blame for France's role in the deportations -- which totaled more than 75,000 -- since Jacques Chirac first did so in 1995.

"Time does its work," Macron said. "Archives open (and) the truth comes out. It's stark, irrevocable. It imposes itself on us all," Macron said.

Netanyahu hailed the "special heroism" of the French resistance to the Nazis, praising the "noble French citizens who at great risk to their own lives" saved thousands more Jews from perishing in the death camps where at least six million would die overall between 1941 and 1945.

"For the sacred honor of those who perished... let us remember the past, let us secure tomorrow," he said.

"The strength of Israel is that it is the one certain guarantee that the Jewish people will never undergo a Holocaust again."

Among Sunday's other speakers were prominent French Nazi hunter Serge Klarsfeld and Pierre-Francois Veil, son of Holocaust survivor and rights icon Simone Veil, who died late last month aged 89.

Netanyahu's visit is the first since he joined a massive march attended by numerous world leaders held in solidarity with the victims of the January 2015 terror attacks on the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine and a Jewish supermarket.

He was to hold talks later Sunday with Macron, the first since the French president's election in May.

Netanyahu arrives just after a surge of violence in Israel, where a shooting attack by three Arab Israeli terrorists in Jerusalem's Old City Friday left two Israeli police officers and the attackers dead.

He is expected to sound Macron out on his position on the Arab-Israeli conflict.

But it is not yet clear whether Macron will follow the pro-active line taken by his Socialist predecessor Francois Hollande, whose efforts to mobilize the international community on the question angered Israel.

Talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority have been at a standstill since the failure of US mediation in the spring of 2014.

The two leaders are also expected to discuss Israel's arch-foe Iran, in particular Tehran's role in the Syrian conflict, where it is backing President Bashar al-Assad.

Netanyahu's presence at the ceremony sparked controversy, with the Union of French Jews for Peace (UJFP), a leftist and pro-Palestinian organization, calling the invitation "shocking" and "unacceptable".

The UJFP, accused the Israeli government of "usurping the memory of the victims of Nazism to make people believe that Israel represents all the world's Jews".